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Antibiotika-Resistenz: Die Tricks der Bakterien : Pumpsysteme werfen die Arzneistoffe aus der Zelle
(2009)
Immer häufiger sind Bakterien resistent gegen ein bestimmtes Antibiotikum, oft auch gleich gegen mehrere. Eine Infektion, die von solchen multiresistenten Bakterien verursacht wird, kann nicht mehr mit Antibiotika bekämpft werden. Im schlimmsten Fall führt sie bei immungeschwächten Patienten zum Tod. Um zielgerichtet neue und wirkungsvolle Medikamente entwickeln zu können, ist es wichtig zu wissen, wie die Bakterienzelle sich gegen die Zerstörung durch Antibiotika wehrt. Ein inzwischen genau entschlüsselter Mechanismus ist die Efflux-Pumpe, die für die Zelle schädliche Substanzen wieder hinausbefördert.
Riboswitches are a novel class of genetic control elements that function through the direct interaction of small metabolite molecules with structured RNA elements. The ligand is bound with high specificity and affinity to its RNA target and induces conformational changes of the RNA's secondary and tertiary structure upon binding. To elucidate the molecular basis of the remarkable ligand selectivity and affinity of one of these riboswitches, extensive all-atom molecular dynamics simulations in explicit solvent ({approx}1 µs total simulation length) of the aptamer domain of the guanine sensing riboswitch are performed. The conformational dynamics is studied when the system is bound to its cognate ligand guanine as well as bound to the non-cognate ligand adenine and in its free form. The simulations indicate that residue U51 in the aptamer domain functions as a general docking platform for purine bases, whereas the interactions between C74 and the ligand are crucial for ligand selectivity. These findings either suggest a two-step ligand recognition process, including a general purine binding step and a subsequent selection of the cognate ligand, or hint at different initial interactions of cognate and noncognate ligands with residues of the ligand binding pocket. To explore possible pathways of complex dissociation, various nonequilibrium simulations are performed which account for the first steps of ligand unbinding. The results delineate the minimal set of conformational changes needed for ligand release, suggest two possible pathways for the dissociation reaction, and underline the importance of long-range tertiary contacts for locking the ligand in the complex.
Lentiviral vectors mediate gene transfer into dividing and most non-dividing cells. Thereby, they stably integrate the transgene into the host cell genome. For this reason, lentiviral vectors are a promising tool for gene therapy. However, safety and efficiency of lentiviral mediated gene transfer still needs to be optimised. Ideally, cell entry should be restricted to the cell population relevant for a particular therapeutic application. Furthermore, lentiviral vectors able to transduce quiescent lymphocytes are desirable. Although many approaches were followed to engineer retroviral envelope proteins, an effective and universally applicable system for retargeting of lentiviral cell entry is still not available. Just before the experimental work of this thesis was started, retargeting of measles virus (MV) cell entry was achieved. This virus has two types of envelope glycoproteins, the hemagglutinin (H) protein responsible for receptor recognition and the fusion (F) protein mediating membrane fusion. For retargeting, the H protein was mutated in its interaction sites for the native MV receptors and a ligand or a single-chain antibody (scAb) was fused to its ectodomain. It was hypothesised that the retargeting system of MV can be transferred to lentiviral vectors by pseudotyping human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) derived vector particles with the MV glycoproteins. As the unmodified MV glycoproteins did not pseudotype HIV vectors, two F and 15 H protein variants carrying stepwise truncations or amino acid (aa) exchanges in their cytoplasmic tails were screened for their ability to form MV-HIV pseudotypes. The combinations Hcd18/Fcd30, Hcd19/Fcd30 and Hcd24+4A/Fcd30 led to most efficient pseudotype formation with titers above 10exp6 transducing units /ml, using concentrated particles. The F cytoplasmic tail was truncated by 30 aa and the H cytoplasmic tail was truncated by 18, 19 or 24 residues with four added alanines after the start methionine in the latter case. Western blot analysis indicated that particle incorporation of the MV glycoproteins was enhanced upon truncation of their cytoplasmic tails. With the MV-HIV vectors high titers on different cell lines expressing one or both MV receptors were obtained, whereas MV receptor-negative cells remained untransduced. Titers were enhanced using an optimal H to F plasmid ratio (1:7) during vector particle production. Based on the described pseudotyping with the MV glycoprotein variants, HIV vectors retargeted to the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) or the B cell surface marker CD20 were generated. For the production of the retargeted vectors MVaEGFR-HIV and MVaCD20-HIV, Fcd30 together with a native receptor blind Hcd18 protein, displaying at its ectodomain either the ligand EGF or a scAb directed against CD20 were used. With these vectors, gene transfer into target receptor-positive cells was several orders of magnitude more efficient than into control cells. The almost complete absence of background transduction of non-target cells was e.g. demonstrated in mixed cell populations, where the CD20-targeting vector selectively eliminated CD20-positive cells upon suicide gene transfer. Remarkably, transduction of activated primary human CD20-positive B cells was much more efficient with the MVaCD20-HIV vector than with the standard pseudotype vector VSV-G-HIV. Even more surprisingly, MVaCD20-HIV vectors were able to transduce quiescent primary human B cells, which until then had been resistant towards lentiviral gene transfer. The most critical step during the production of MV-HIV pseudotypes was the identification of H cytoplasmic tail mutants that allowed pseudotyping while retaining the fusion helper function. In contrast to previously inefficient targeting strategies, the reason for the success of this novel targeting system must be based on the separation of the receptor recognition and fusion functions onto two different proteins. Furthermore, with the CD20-targeting vector transduction of quiescent B cells was demonstrated for the first time. Own data and literature data suggest that CD20 binding and hyper-cross-linking by the vector particles results in calcium influx and thus activation of quiescent B cells. Alternatively this feature may be based on a residual binding activity of the MV glycoproteins to the native MV receptors that is insufficient for entry but induces cytoskeleton rearrangements dissolving the post-entry block of HIV vectors. Hence, in this thesis efficient retargeting of lentiviral vectors and transduction of quiescent cells was combined. This novel targeting strategy should be easily adaptable to many other target molecules by extending the modified MV H protein with appropriate specific domains or scAbs. It should now be possible to tailor lentiviral vectors for highly selective gene transfer into any desired target cell population with an unprecedented degree of efficiency.
Shape complementarity is a compulsory condition for molecular recognition. In our 3D ligand-based virtual screening approach called SQUIRREL, we combine shape-based rigid body alignment with fuzzy pharmacophore scoring. Retrospective validation studies demonstrate the superiority of methods which combine both shape and pharmacophore information on the family of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs). We demonstrate the real-life applicability of SQUIRREL by a prospective virtual screening study, where a potent PPARalpha agonist with an EC50 of 44 nM and 100-fold selectivity against PPARgamma has been identified...
The light-harvesting complex of photosystem II (LHC-II) is the major antenna complex in plant photosynthesis. It accounts for roughly 30% of the total protein in plant chloroplasts, which makes it arguably the most abundant membrane protein on Earth, and binds about half of plant chlorophyll (Chl). The complex assembles as a trimer in the thylakoid membrane and binds a total of 54 pigment molecules, including 24 Chl a, 18 Chl b, 6 lutein (Lut), 3 neoxanthin (Neo) and 3 violaxanthin (Vio). LHC-II has five key roles in plant photosynthesis. It: (1) harvests sunlight and transmits excitation energy to the reaction centres of photosystems II and I, (2) regulates the amount of excitation energy reaching each of the two photosystems, (3) has a structural role in the architecture of the photosynthetic supercomplexes, (4) contributes to the tight appression of thylakoid membranes in chloroplast grana, and (5) protects the photosynthetic apparatus from photo damage by non photochemical quenching (NPQ). A major fraction of NPQ is accounted for its energy-dependent component qE. Despite being critical for plant survival and having been studied for decades, the exact details of how excess absorbed light energy is dissipated under qE conditions remain enigmatic. Today it is accepted that qE is regulated by the magnitude of the pH gradient (ΔpH) across the thylakoid membrane. It is also well documented that the drop in pH in the thylakoid lumen during high-light conditions activates the enzyme violaxanthin de-epoxidase (VDE), which converts the carotenoid Vio into zeaxanthin (Zea) as part of the xanthophyll cycle. Additionally, studies with Arabidopsis mutants revealed that the photosystem II subunit PsbS is necessary for qE. How these physiological responses switch LHC-II from the active, energy transmitting to the quenched, energy-dissipating state, in which the solar energy is not transmitted to the photosystems but instead dissipated as heat, remains unclear and is the subject of this thesis. From the results obtained during this doctoral work, five main conclusions can be drawn concerning the mechanism of qE: 1. Substitution of Vio by Zea in LHC-II is not sufficient for efficient dissipation of excess excitation energy. 2. Aggregation quenching of LHC-II does not require Vio, Neo nor a specific Chl pair. 3. With one exception, the pigment structure in LHC-II is rigid. 4. The two X-ray structures of LHC-II show the same energy transmitting state of the complex. 5. Crystalline LHC-II resembles the complex in the thylakoid membrane. Models of the aggregation quenching mechanism in vitro and the qE mechanism in vivo are presented as a corollary of this doctoral work. LHC-II aggregation quenching in vitro is attributed to the formation of energy sinks on the periphery of LHC-II through random interaction with other trimers, free pigments or impurities. A similar but unrelated process is proposed to occur in the thylakoid membrane, by which excess excitation energy is dissipated upon specific interaction between LHC-II and a PsbS monomer carrying Zea. At the end of this thesis, an innovative experimental model for the analysis of all key aspects of qE is proposed in order to finally solve the qE enigma, one of the last unresolved problems in photosynthesis research.
Im ersten Teil dieser Arbeit wurden Lewis-Säure-katalysierte Friedel-Crafts-Alkylierungen unter Verwendung von Bismut(III)-Salzen als Katalysator untersucht. Bismut(III)-Salze haben gegenüber vielen anderen Metallsalzen den Vorteil, dass sie ungiftig, luftstabil und preiswert sind. In der Regel werden bei der Friedel-Crafts-Alkylierung überstöchiometrische Mengen einer Lewis-Säure wie AlCl3 benötigt und insbesondere Alkylchloride als Reaktionspartner eingesetzt, was eine hohe Menge unerwünschter Abfallprodukte zur Folge hat. Der Einsatz katalytischer Mengen Bi(OTf)3 und die Verwendung von Benzylalkoholen als elektrophile Reaktionspartner beheben diesen gravierenden Nachteil, da hier lediglich Wasser als Nebenprodukt gebildet wird. So konnte innerhalb der vorliegenden Arbeit zunächst eine effiziente Bi(OTf)3-katalysierte Alkylierungen von 1,3-Diketonen unter Verwendung von Benzyl- und Allylalkoholen als Elektrophile entwickelt werden. Mit lediglich 1 Mol-% Bi(OTf)3 konnten die gewünschten 3-alkylierten 1,3-Diketone in guten Ausbeuten isoliert werden. Weiterhin konnten neben Allyl- und Benzylalkoholen auch Styrene als Elektrophile genutzt werden. Unter Verwendung von 0.5 - 5 Mol-% Bi(OTf)3 konnten sowohl Arene, als auch 1,3-Dicarbonylverbindungen wie z. B. Acetylacetonat als nucleophile Reaktionspartner eingesetzt werden. Die entsprechenden 1,1-Diarylalkane und benzylierten 1,3-Dicarbonyle wurden dabei in hohen Ausbeuten erhalten. Um eine Anwendung für die zuvor entwickelten Methoden zu schaffen, wurde im weiteren Verlauf die Bismut(III)-katalysierte Benzylierung und Hydroalkylierung von 4-Hydroxycoumarinen untersucht. Die so erhaltenen Warfarinderivate sind von hohem medizinischem Nutzen, da diese Verbindungen als hoch potente Vitamin K Antagonisten eine breite Anwendung in der Thrombosevorbeugung oder als Rodentizide finden. Im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit ging es um die Entwicklung neuer, chiraler Brønsted-Säure Katalysatoren. Die asymmetrische Brønsted-Säure Katalyse ist ein wachsendes Forschungsfeld und es konnten in den letzten Jahren viele enantioselektive Transformationen unter Verwendung chiraler BINOL-Phosphorsäurediester entwickelt werden. Bis vor kurzem waren BINOL-Phosphorsäurediester aufgrund ihres milden pH-Werts auf die Aktivierung von prochiralen Iminen beschränkt. Kürzlich wurden jedoch N-triflierte Phosphoramide als eine neue Klasse hoch potenter Brønsted-Säuren beschrieben. Während dieser Arbeit wurden zunächst verschiedene BINOL-basierte N-Triflylphosphoramide synthetisiert. Ausgehend von H8-BINOL konnte hier eine effiziente 3-Schritt Synthese dieser neuen Katalysatorklasse entwickelt werden. Dieser Syntheseweg verzichtet auf Schutzgruppen und ist daher in kürzerer Zeit und in besseren Ausbeuten durchführbar, als die zuvor beschrieben Synthesewege der ungesättigten BINOL-Phosphate oder N-Triflylphosphoramide. Strukturell wurden die auf diese Weise synthetisierten N-Triflylphosphoramide durch Röntgenstrukturanalyse, NMR und TXRF weiter untersucht und deren Aktivität gegenüber verschiedenen prochiralen Carbonylverbindungen überprüft. Hierbei wurde festgestellt, dass N-Triflylphosphoramide, im Vergleich zu BINOL-Phosphorsäurediestern, deutlich besser in der Lage sind, die asymmetrische Nazarov-Cyclisierung von Divinylketonen zu katalysieren. Die gewünschten Cyclopentenone konnten nach sehr kurzen Reaktionszeiten in hohen Ausbeuten und sehr guten Selektivitäten von bis zu 98% ee isoliert werden. Darauf aufbauend wurde die Brønsted-Säure-katalysierte Aktivierung von ungesättigten α-Ketoestern untersucht. Bei der Verwendung von N-Methylindol als Nucleophil konnten die 4-substituierten α-Ketoester unter Verwendung von 5 Mol-% eines 3,3’-silylierten-N-triflylphosphoramids in hohen Ausbeuten und sehr guten Enantioselektivitäten isoliert werden. Neben der erwarteten 1,4-Addition trat, abhängig von der gewählten Brønsted-Säure, eine Doppeladdition des Indols in 2-Position des α-Ketoesters auf. Das so erhaltene Bisindol zeigte hierbei völlig unerwartet atropisomeres Verhalten. Weiterhin konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Bildung dieses Bisindols vermutlich über eine carbokationische Spezies verläuft und es sich somit um eine enantioselektive Sn1-artige nucleophile Substitution handelt. Darauf aufbauend wurde eine N-Triflylphosphoramid-katalysierte Alkylierung von γ-Hydroxylactamen entwickelt. Hier kommt es Brønsted-Säure-katalysiert zu der Bildung eines N-Acyliminium-Ions, welches schließlich durch Indol als Nucleophil abgefangen wird. Auf diese Weise konnten verschieden substituierte γ-Hydroxylactame in die entsprechenden Indol-substituierten Analoga in hohen Enantioselektivitäten überführt werden. Dies ist das erste Beispiel einer hoch enantioselektiven, Brønsted-Säure-katalysierten Substitution von γ-Hydroxylactamen.