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The use of chemically synthesized short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) is currently the method of choice to manipulate gene expression in mammalian cell culture, yet improvements of siRNA design is expectably required for successful application in vivo. Several studies have aimed at improving siRNA performance through the introduction of chemical modifications but a direct comparison of these results is difficult. We have directly compared the effect of 21 types of chemical modifications on siRNA activity and toxicity in a total of 2160 siRNA duplexes. We demonstrate that siRNA activity is primarily enhanced by favouring the incorporation of the intended antisense strand during RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) loading by modulation of siRNA thermodynamic asymmetry and engineering of siRNA 3-overhangs. Collectively, our results provide unique insights into the tolerance for chemical modifications and provide a simple guide to successful chemical modification of siRNAs with improved activity, stability and low toxicity.
Misregulated receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), i.e. the epidermal growth factor receptor EGFR or the insulin-like growth factor receptor 1 (IGF-1R), can be involved in the development of cancer. Monoclonal antibodies specifically inhibit the RTKs in cancer therapy. The scope of this thesis is to investigate the molecular basis of the inhibition through the therapeutic antibodies matuzumab (EMD72000) against EGFR and EMD1159476 against IGF-1R. The 3D crystal structure of matuzumab in complex with the EGFR domain III shows an eptiope connected with a novel inhibition mechanism: a non-competitive, sterical inhibition of receptor acitivation. The anti-IGF-1R targeted monoclonal antibody EMD1159476 shows a reduced binding capacity to the receptor in the presence of ligand indicating a competitive inhibition mechanism. The epitope of EMD1159476 is within domain II of the receptor. The results of these molecular interaction studies are important for the clinical therapies with these monoclonal antibodies. The matuzumab-EGFR complex crystal structure shows that a simultaneous binding of matuzumab and cetuximab (Erbitux) is possible. The latter antibody is already in clinical use. A combination of several therapeutic antibodies in cancer treatment might show synergistic effects and benefits for the patients.
A solid-supported membrane (SSM) is an alkanethiol/lipid hybrid membrane with comparable lipid mobility, conductivity, and capacitance than a black lipid membrane (BLM). However, mechanical perturbations, which usually destroy a BLM, do not influence the life-time of a SSM, which is mechanically so stable that solutions may be rapidly exchanged at its surface. This key property has been utilized in this thesis to characterize electrophysiologically two bacterial secondary active transporters (MelB and LacY) as well as to investigate the specific interactions between ions and lipid membranes. These three different projects are summarized below: (1) The properties of lipid membranes, which represent the most important biological interface between intracellular and extracellular compartments, are essentially modulated by the ionic composition of the surrounding aqueous medium. To investigate specific interactions between ions and lipid membranes, solutions of different ionic composition were exchanged at the surface of a SSM through a flow system. This solution exchange resulted in charge translocations that were interpreted in terms of binding of the ions to the lipid headgroups at the SSM surface. We found that chaotropic anions and kosmotropic cations are attracted to the membrane independent of the membrane composition. In particular, the same behaviour was found for lipid headgroups bearing no charge like monoolein. This general trend is modulated by the electrostatic interaction of the ions with the lipid headgroup charge. Our experimental results are in agreement with recent molecular dynamic simulations of PC membranes. (2) Rapid solution exchange on a solid-supported membrane (SSM) is investigated using fluidic structures and a solid-supported membrane in a wall jet geometry. The flow was analyzed with a new technique based on specific ion interactions with the surface combined with an electrical measurement. The critical parameters affecting the time course of the solution exchange and the transfer function describing the time resolution of the SSM system were determined. The experimental data indicate that the solution transport follows a plug flow geometry while the rise of the surface concentration can be approximated by Hagen Poiseuille flow with ideal mixing at the surface of the SSM. Using an improved cuvette design a solution exchange as fast as 2 ms was achieved at the surface of a solid supported membrane. As an application of the technique the rate constant of a fast electrogenic reaction in the melibiose permease MelB, a bacterial (Escherichia coli) sugar transporter, is determined. For comparison, the kinetics of a conformational transition of the same transporter was measured using stopped-flow tryptophan fluorescence spectroscopy. The relaxation time constant obtained for the charge displacement agrees with that determined in the stopped-flow experiments. This supports the previous proposition that upon sugar binding MelB undergoes an electrogenic conformational transition with a rate constant of k ~ 250 s-1. (3) Electrogenic events due to activity of wild-type lactose permease from Escherichia coli (LacY) were investigated with proteoliposomes containing purified LacY adsorbed on a solid-supported membrane electrode. Downhill sugar/H+ symport into the proteoliposomes generates transient currents. Studies at different lipid to protein ratios and at different pH values, as well as inactivation by N-ethylmaleimide, show that the currents are due specifically to the activity of LacY. From analysis of the currents under different conditions and comparison with biochemical data, it is apparent that the predominant electrogenic event in downhill sugar/H+ symport is H+ release. In contrast, LacY mutants E325A and C154G, which bind ligand normally but are severely defective with respect to lactose/H+ symport, exhibit a minor electrogenic event upon addition of LacY-specific substrates, representing only 6% of the total charge displacement of the wild-type. This activity is due either to substrate binding per se or to a conformational transition following substrate binding. We propose that turnover of LacY involves at least two electrogenic reactions: (i) a minor reaction that occurs upon sugar binding and is due to a conformational transition in LacY; and (ii) a major reaction due to cytoplasmic release of H+ during downhill sugar/H+ symport, which is the limiting step for this mode of transport.
Specific functions of biological systems often require conformational transitions of macromolecules. Thus, being able to describe and predict conformational changes of biological macromolecules is not only important for understanding their impact on biological function, but will also have implications for the modelling of (macro)molecular complex formation and in structure-based drug design approaches. The “conformational selection model” provides the foundation for computational investigations of conformational fluctuations of the unbound protein state. These fluctuations may reveal conformational states adopted by the bound proteins. The aim of this work is to incorporate directional information in a geometry-based approach, in order to sample biologically relevant conformational space extensively. Interestingly, coarse-grained normal mode (CGNM) approaches, e.g., the elastic network model (ENM) and rigid cluster normal mode analysis (RCNMA), have emerged recently and provide directions of intrinsic motions in terms of harmonic modes (also called normal modes). In my previous work and in other studies it has been shown that conformational changes upon ligand binding occur along a few low-energy modes of unbound proteins and can be efficiently calculated by CGNM approaches. In order to explore the validity and the applicability of CGNM approaches, a large-scale comparison of essential dynamics (ED) modes from molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and normal modes from CGNM was performed over a dataset of 335 proteins. Despite high coarse-graining, low frequency normal modes from CGNM correlate very well with ED modes in terms of directions of motions (average maximal overlap is 0.65) and relative amplitudes of motions (average maximal overlap is 0.73). In order to exploit the potential of CGNM approaches, I have developed a three-step approach for efficient exploration of intrinsic motions of proteins. The first two steps are based on recent developments in rigidity and elastic network theory. Initially, static properties of the protein are determined by decomposing the protein into rigid clusters using the graph-theoretical approach FIRST at an all-atom representation of the protein. In a second step, dynamic properties of the molecule are revealed by the rotations-translations of blocks approach (RTB) using an elastic network model representation of the coarse-grained protein. In the final step, the recently introduced idea of constrained geometric simulations of diffusive motions in proteins is extended for efficient sampling of conformational space. Here, the low-energy (frequency) normal modes provided by the RCNMA approach are used to guide the backbone motions. The NMSim approach was validated on hen egg white lysozyme by comparing it to previously mentioned simulation methods in terms of residue fluctuations, conformational space explorations, essential dynamics, sampling of side-chain rotamers, and structural quality. Residue fluctuations in NMSim generated ensemble is found to be in good agreement with MD fluctuations with a correlation coefficient of around 0.79. A comparison of different geometry-based simulation approaches shows that FRODA is restricted in sampling the backbone conformational space. CONCOORD is restricted in sampling the side-chain conformational space. NMSim sufficiently samples both the backbone and the side-chain conformations taking experimental structures and conformations from the state of the art MD simulation as reference. The NMSim approach is also applied to a dataset of proteins where conformational changes have been observed experimentally, either in domain or functionally important loop regions. The NMSim simulations starting from the unbound structures are able to reach conformations similar to ligand bound conformations (RMSD < 2.4 Å) in 4 out of 5 cases of domain moving proteins. In these four cases, good correlation coefficients (R > 0.7) between the RMS fluctuations derived from NMSim generated structures and two experimental structures are observed. Furthermore, intrinsic fluctuations in NMSim simulation correlate with the region of loop conformational changes observed upon ligand binding in 2 out of 3 cases. The NMSim generated pathway of conformational change from the unbound structure to the ligand bound structure of adenylate kinase is validated by a comparison to experimental structures reflecting different states of the pathway as proposed by previous studies. Interestingly, the generated pathway confirms that the LID domain closure precedes the closing of the NMPbind domain, even if no target conformation is provided in NMSim. Hence, the results in this study show that, incorporating directional information in the geometry-based approach NMSim improves the sampling of biologically relevant conformational space and provides a computationally efficient alternative to state of the art MD simulations.
This thesis describes the structural characterization of interactions between biological relevant ribonucleic acid biomacromolecules (RNAs) and selected ligands to optimize the methodologies for the design of pharmacological lead compounds. To achieve this aim, not only the structures of the RNA, the ligand and their complexes need to be known, but also information about the inherent dynamics, especially of the target RNA, are necessary. To determine the structure and dynamics of these molecules and their complexes, liquid state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) is a suitable and powerful method. The necessity for these investigations arises from the lack of knowledge in RNA-ligand interactions, e.g. for the development of new medicinal drugs targeting crucial RNA sequences. In the first chapters of this thesis (Chapters II to IV), an introduction into RNA research is given with a focus on RNA structural features (Chapter II), into the interacting molecules, the biology of the specific RNA targets and the further development of their ligands (Chapter III) and into the NMR theory and methodologies used within this thesis (Chapter IV). Chapter II begins with a description of RNA characteristics and functions, placing the focus on the increasing attention that these biomacromolecules have attracted in recent years due to their diverse biological functionalities. This is followed by a detailed description of general structural features of RNA molecules. The biological functions of the RNAs investigated in this thesis (Human immunodeficiency virus PSI- and TAR-RNA and Coxsackievirus B3 Stemloop D in the 5’-cloverleaf element), together with their known structural characteristics are introduced in Chapter III. Furthermore, a description of the investigated ligands is given, focusing on the methods how their affinity and specificity were determined. The introduction is completed in Chapter IV, where the relevant NMR theory and methodologies are explained. First, kinetics and thermodynamics of ligand binding are summarized from an NMR point of view. Subsequently, a detailed description of the resonance assignment procedures for RNAs and peptidic ligands is given. This procedure mainly concentrates on the assignment of the proton resonances, which are essential for the later structure calculation from NMR restraints. The procedure for NMR structure calculation of RNA and its complexes follows with a short introduction into the programs ARIA and HADDOCK. The final part of this chapter explains the relaxation theory and the methodology to extract dynamic information from autocorrelated relaxation rates via the model-free formalism. In the Chapters V to VII of this thesis, the original publications are included and grouped into three topics. Chapter V comprehends the publications on the investigations of HIV PSI-RNA and its hexapeptidic ligand. These three publications[1-3] focus on the characterization of the ligand and its binding properties, its structure and the optimization of its composition aiming to improve its usage for further spectroscopic investigations.
The aim of the study was to investigate the role of the CX3C chemokine FKN in the role of platelet adhesion. The presence of the FKN receptor CX3CR1 in platelets is demonstrated and G-protein dependent activation of platelets with soluble FKN results in the increased adhesion of platelets to collagen and fibrinogen under flow 228 and adhesion of leucocytes to firmly attached platelets 231. Whether membrane-bound FKN is capable to promote the direct adhesion of platelets in flowing blood analogue to leucocytes was completely unknown. The adhesion mechanisms of FKN in mediating the adhesion of leucocytes under flow are well characterised and represent a novel unique mechanism of leucocyte capture and firm adhesion: FKN is responsible for immediate arrest of flowing CX3CR1 expressing leucocytes without the participation of additional adhesion receptors and ligands. This is in contrast to the classical leucocyte adhesion pathways, which are multistep processes involving leucocyte arrest, rolling and subsequent cell activation prior to firm arrest. In leucocytes, the FKN – CX3CR1 axis is sufficient to allow rapid arrest of leucocytes at low shear flow conditions 67, 101, 115, 122, 261. The set of data from this study demonstrates that immobilised FKN was capable to mediate the adhesion of platelets under low shear conditions, whereas there was no interaction in the absence of shear flow. In the presence of vWf in the adhesion matrix, FKN mediated the potent increased adhesion of platelets. This was in parts due to the activation of flowing platelets via CX3CR1 and the augmented translocation of platelets on FKN via the vWf receptor GPIbα. With respect to platelet activation, the function of endothelial FKN was comparable to leucocytes: in both cell types, the FKN dependent activation is mediated by its cognate receptor CX3CR1. This is in contrast to the adhesive capacity: in leucocytes, FKN dependent adhesion is mediated by CX3CR1, whereas in platelets, the adhesive capacity was mostly mediated by the vWf receptor GPIbα with only minor contribution from CX3CR1. In platelets, activation and adhesion by FKN were mediated by two distinct receptors, whereas in leucocytes, CX3CR1 is solely responsible for FKN dependent activation and adhesion. The presented results point out to a role of platelets in early stage of atherosclerosis. The in vivo expression of both, FKN and vWf is regulated by TNF-α, which is released in early stages of inflammation. The presence of vWf and FKN in the endothelial lining of blood vessels during these conditions is sufficient to initiate the capturing and translocation of platelets on the tunica interna. The rolling of platelets on the endothelium can induce endothelial damage and inflammation of the vessel, which might advance to the generation of clinically significant atherosclerotic plaques and fibrous atheroma.
P2X receptors represent the third superfamily of ligand gated ion channels with ATP as their natural ligand. Most of the mammalian P2X receptors are non-selective cation channels, which upon activation, mediate membrane depolarization and have physiological roles ranging from fast excitatory synaptic transmission, modulation of pain-sensation, LTP to apoptosis etc. In spite of them being an attractive drug target, their potential as a drug target is limited by the lack of basic understanding of the structure-function relationship of these receptors. In my thesis, I have investigated the behavior of homomeric P2X receptor subunits with the help of photolabeling and fluorescence techniques coupled to electrophysiological measurements using Xenopus laevis oocytes heterologous expression system. Concurrent photolabeling by BzATP and current recordings from the same set of receptors in real time has revealed that the gating process in homomeric P2X receptors is contributed individually by each subunit in an additive manner. Our study for the first time describes the agonist potency of Alexa-ATP (a fluorescent ATP analog) on P2X1 receptors. The use of Alexa-ATP in our experiments elucidated that receptor subunits are not independent but interacting with each other in a cooperative manner. The type of cooperativity, however, depended on the type and concentrations of allosteric/competing ligands. Based on our results, in my thesis we propose an allosteric model for ligand-receptor interactions in P2X receptors. When simulated, the model could replicate our experimental findings thus, further validating our model. Further, correlation between occupancy of P2X1 receptors (determined using binding curve for Alexa-ATP) with the steady-state desensitization suggests that binding of three agonist molecules per receptor are required to desensitize P2X1 receptors. We further extended the approach of fluorescence with electrophysiological measurement to assign the role for different domains in P2X1 receptors with the help of environmental sensitive, cysteine reactive fluorophore (TMRM). Cysteine rich domain-1 of P2X1 receptors (C117-C165) was found to be involved in structural rearrangements after agonist and antagonist binding. In contrast to the present understanding, that the binding of an antagonist cannot induce desensitization in P2X1 receptors and the receptors need to open first before undergoing desensitization, we propose based on our results that a competitive antagonist can also induce desensitization in P2X1 receptors by bypassing the open state. We have attempted to answer few intriguing questions in the field of P2X receptor research and we think that our answers provide many avenues to the basic understanding of functioning of P2X receptors.
Introduction: Immune paralysis with massive T-cell apoptosis is a central pathogenic event during sepsis and correlates with septic patient mortality. Previous observations implied a crucial role of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ) during T-cell apoptosis.
Methods: To elucidate mechanisms of PPARγ-induced T-cell depletion, we used an endotoxin model as well as the caecal ligation and puncture sepsis model to imitate septic conditions in wild-type versus conditional PPARγ knockout (KO) mice.
Results: PPARγ KO mice showed a marked survival advantage compared with control mice. Their T cells were substantially protected against sepsis-induced death and showed a significantly higher expression of the pro-survival factor IL-2. Since PPARγ is described to repress nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) transactivation and concomitant IL-2 expression, we propose inhibition of NFAT as the underlying mechanism allowing T-cell apoptosis. Corroborating our hypothesis, we observed up-regulation of the pro-apoptotic protein BIM and downregulation of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2 in control mice, which are downstream effector proteins of IL-2 receptor signaling. Application of a neutralizing anti-IL-2 antibody reversed the pro-survival effect of PPARγ-deficient T cells and confirmed IL-2-dependent apoptosis during sepsis.
Conclusion: Apparently antagonizing PPARγ in T cells might improve their survival during sepsis, which concomitantly enhances defence mechanisms and possibly provokes an increased survival of septic patients.
Na+/H+ antiporters are ubiquitous membrane proteins involved in ion homeostasis and pH sensing. The amino acid sequence of one such antiporter, MjNhaP1, from Methanococcus jannaschii, shows a significant homology to eukaryotic sodium proton exchangers like NHE1 from Homo sapiens and SOS1 of Arabidopsis thaliana than to the well-characterized Escherichia coli NhaA or NhaB. MjNhaP1 shows activity at acidic pH unlike NhaA, which is active at basic pH. 13 transmembrane helices have been predicted to be present in NhaP1. A projection map, calculated by Cryo-EM of 2D crystals of MjNhaP1 grown at pH 4, showed it to be a dimer containing elongated densities in the centre of the dimer and a cluster of density peaks on either side of the dimer core (Vinothkumar et al., 2005). Incubation of 2D crystals at pH 8 on the EM grid resulted in well-defined conformational changes, clearly evident in a difference map as a major change in density distribution within the helix bundle (Vinothkumar et al., 2005). The aim of this dissertation is to understand the working mechanism of MjNhaP1 by determining its three-dimensional structure. The aim was initially approached by structure determination by X-ray crystallography. The limitation for this method was the low expression yield, which was 0.5–0.7mg/ml (Vinothkumar et al., 2005). After various optimization trials, the expression yield of the recombinant protein could be elevated to 2-2.5mg of pure protein per litre of culture by the method of autoinduction (Studier et al., 2005). To obtain well diffracting 3D crystals, purification conditions (Vinothkumar et al., 2005) were modified. 3D crystals were obtained under various conditions, which has so far not diffracted X-Ray beyond 8Å. Parallely, optimization of parameters (Vinothkumar et al., 2005) for 2D crystals formation was carried out. A combination of 1% DDM used for lipid solubilization, and 1% OG in the buffer of the purified protein produced 1-2 μm wide tubular 2D crystals of NhaP1. This batch of crystal proved to be the optimal for data collection at higher tilt angle with the electron microscope. A 3D map showed p22121 symmetry and revealed a tight dimer with an oval shape. The region in the central part of the dimer is composed of several tilted helices forming an interface between both monomers. On either side of the dimer interface, a group of six tightly packed helices form a bundle. This bundle contains three straight helices in the centre of the monomer and three helices in the periphery. Comparison of the structures of E.coli NhaA and M. jannaschii NhaP1 show substantial differences in length and slope of corresponding helices between both antiporters. A 3D model of NhaP1 based on the 3D map revealed 13 helices, which has been named as A-M to distinguish it from the NhaA helices. Overlaying the X-ray structure onto the 3D map revealed that the disrupted helices IV and XI of NhaA superimpose two central helices at similar position in the 3D map of NhaP1. The disrupted helices IV and XI in the X-ray structure of NhaA have been proposed as the putative ion-binding and translocation site (Hunte C et al, 2005; Arkin IT et al, 2007; Screpanti & Hunte (2007). This motif appears to be present also in NhaP1, as suggested by the close fit of NhaA helices IV and XI on the putative helices E and L of the NhaP1 model. These two putative helices E and L in NhaP1 contain the highly conserved TDP and GPRVVP motif, which are crucial for antiporter activity (Hellmer et al., 2002, Hellmer et al., 2003). In the overlay, helix V of NhaA containing the two essential, conserved aspartates D163 and D164 fits the density of the putative helix F of NhaP1, which contains the conserved motif FNDP. The homologous D161 in the FNDP motif of NhaP1 is essential for transport activity as show by mutagenesis (Hellmer at al., 2003). Significant differences are visible in the region of the dimer interface of the 3D map of NhaP1 occupied by helices VI, VII, and VIII in NhaA. This region shows an extra helical density (A) in the 3D map of NhaP1. By alignment of MjNhaP1 sequence with the amino acid sequences of several Na+/H+ exchangers, it was evident that the additional helix (A) is located in the N terminus of NhaP1. In our sequence alignment, a putative hydrophobic segment corresponding to this additional helix A is present in other archaeal and eukaryotic antiporters but not in any of the bacterial ones. The N-terminus of the human Na+/H+ exchanger NHE1 has been predicted to contain a highly hydrophobic signal peptide. This indicates the probability of the N-terminal helix A of NhaP1 to be an uncleaved signal peptide. Besides being a signal sequence targeting NhaP1 to the membrane, the map suggests that this helix might be involved in the formation of dimer contacts between both monomers. A gene duplication event is evident in the 3D map of NhaP1, as not only the helices D, E, F and K, L, M are related by an inverted repeat but also the helices B, C and I, J are related. We present here the three-dimensional architecture of a Na+/H+ antiporter from archaea. The presence of the 13th helix suggests the location of the N-terminus to be located in the cytosol and the C-terminus in the periplasm. This would orient NhaP1 in an inverted manner in the membrane in comparison to NhaA. Further structural information at higher resolution and biochemical and biophysical investigations are required to confirm the topology.
The transcription factor p63 is part of the p53 protein family, which consists of three members, p53, p63 and p73. P63 shares structural similarity with all family members, but is associated to different biological functions than p53 or p73. While p53 is mainly linked to tumor suppression and p73 is connected with neuronal development, p63 has been connected to critical biological roles within ectodermal development and skin stem cell biology as well as supervision of the genetic stability of oocytes. Due to its gene structure p63 is expressed as at least six different isoforms, three of them containing a N-terminal transactivation domain. The isoforms that are of biological relevance both have a C-terminal inhibitory domain that negatively regulates the transcriptional activity. This inhibitory domain is supposed to contain two individual components of which one is internally binding and masking the transactivation domain while the other one can be sumoylated. To further investigate this domain a mutational analysis with the help of transactivation assays in SAOS2 cells was carried out to identify the critical amino acids within the inhibitory domain and the impact on transcriptional activity of TAp63alpha, the p63-isoform which is essential for the integrity of the female germline. The results of these experiments show that a stretch of approximately 13 amino acids seems to be important for the regulation of transcriptional activity in TAp63alpha, due to the increased transcriptional activity occurring in this region after mutation. Additional experiments showed that this mechanism is distinct from sumoylation, which seems to have only implications for the intracellular level of TAp63alpha. As a conclusion, the C-terminus of the Tap63alpha is essential for two different mechanisms, which control the transcriptional activity of the protein. Both regulatory elements are independent from each other and can now be restricted to certain amino acids. Activation of the wild type protein might take place in the identified region via post-translational modification. Furthermore an inhibition assay was carried out to test if the same region might have implications on the second biological relevant isoform deltaNp63alpha. The results show that the same amino acids which show an impact on transcriptional activity in Tap63alpha lead to a significant change in functional behaviour of deltaNp63alpha. There is a possibility that both proteins are regulated with opposite effects via the same mechanisms, based at the C-terminus of the p63alpha-isoforms. In both cases a modification of these residues could lead to a more opened conformation of the protein with consequences on promoter binding, which can be even important for deltaNp63alpha with respect to promoter squelching. Both alpha-isoforms seem to be regulated via the C-terminus and to elucidate if that is also the case for TAp63gamma a deletion analysis was carried out. The results show that there are also amino acids within the C-terminus of TAp63gamma, which have implications on the transcriptional activity of the protein. Therefore the C-terminus seems to play a major role for regulation of diverse p63 isoforms.
Based on the commonly used and well-established state-of-the-art DNA sequencing method, i. e. Sanger sequencing, the major target of future research is to develop a fast, cost-effective and gelelectrophoresis-free sequencing method. The aim of the new sequencing technologies is to detect DNA mutations faster and more accurate in order to develop individual therapies for patients (personalized medicine). For this purpose, a lot of novel sequencing techniques like pyrosequencing, mass-spectrometry-assisted sequencing, sequencing by hybridization etc. have been put into practice and already led to commercialized sequencers. The sequencing technology we were mostly interested in is the so-called sequencing-by-synthesis method (SBS). This PhD thesis covers the synthesis of modified nucleosides – the so-called reversible terminators – and their evaluation as reversible terminators. These 3′-modified and dye-labeled nucleotides are incorporated by the polymerase into the DNA-template, then the DNA-synthesis is stopped. After detection of the fluorescent signal, the reversible terminator has to be cleavable in a way (i. e. the polymerase-blocking modification) that the DNA-synthesis can continue. As a result of the polymerase-acceptance tests that have been carried out with the two triphosphates cyanoethoxymethyl(CEM)-dTTP and cyanoethyl(CE)-dTTP as substrates it became clear that the latter one was better incorporated than the first one. Based on this knowledge all four key compounds for the whole reversible terminators possessing the cyanoethyl (CE) group where synthesized within this PhD thesis. Additionally to the synthesis of the modified key compounds, the cleavability of the cyanoethyl function had to be evaluated which is an essential requirement of a reversible terminator for SBS. For addressing this issue, three different CE- and CEM modified monophosphates were created. For each of these three monophosphates an individual synthetic strategy has been developed within this PhD work, each of these strategies and subsequent phosphorylation led to the desired modification. These previously unknown model compounds mimicking the solubility of short oligonucleotides were employed the for qualitative cleavage experiments after their purification and spectroscopical characterization. With these three monophosphates suitable cleavage conditions for a quantitative removal of the CE and the CEM group were examined. In case of the CE function we selectively improved the cleavage conditions while varying the solvent, the reaction temperature as well as the amount of cleaving agent used, in order to make the conditions applicable for an SBS experiment. Due to the fact that the CE function was the most important modification for our SBS experiment, we could even optimize the cleavage efficiency by employing co-solvents like DMSO or DMF. An additional cleavage experiment was carried out by using a short CE-modified oligomer which led to further results that were comparable to the ones obtained from the cleavage experiments of the monomers. One big difference is the required amount of TBAF as cleaving agent for the quantitative removal of the CE-modification from the oligomer. In this case, 7500 equivalents of TBAF are needed for complete CE cleavage at 45 °C compared to the amount of 40 to 80 equivalents TBAF for the monomer (monophosphate). As a conclusion of this result we assume that the amount of cleaving agent and the solubility of the oligomer plays an important role in the CE cleavage efficiency. This assumption was already supported by Saneyoshi et al. who demonstrated for CE-modified RNA oligonucleotides that the CE-cleavage rate is strongly lowered with the increasing of the oligomer length. Thus we could demonstrate that the CE function is quantitatively removable from an oligomer without destroying it. With these results in hands we could prove that the CEM and the CE group are quantitatively cleavable and therefore applicable as blocking groups for reversible terminators. The conditions for the CE cleavage are used for the ArraySBS-“proof-of-principle” which is currently under investigation.
X-ray structure of the Na+-coupled Glycine-Betaine symporter BetP from Corynebacterium glutamicum
(2009)
Cellular membranes are important sites of interaction between cells and their environment. Among the multitude of macromolecular complexes embedded in these membranes, transporters play a particularly important role. These integral membrane proteins perform a number of vital functions that enable cell adaptation to changing environmental conditions. Osmotic stress is a major external stimulus for cells. Bacteria are frequently exposed to either hyperosmotic or hypoosmotic stress. Typical conditions for soil bacteria, such as Corynebacterium glutamicum, vary between dryness and sudden rainfall. Physical stimuli caused by osmotic stress have to be sensed and used to activate appropriate response mechanisms. Hypoosmotic stress causes immediate and uncontrolled influx of water. Cells counteract by instantly opening mechanosensitive channels, which act as emergency valves leading to fast efflux of small solutes out of the cell, therebydiminishing the osmotic gradient across the cell membrane. Hyperosmotic stress, on the other hand, results in water efflux. This is counterbalanced by an accumulation of small, osmotically active solutes in the cytoplasm, the so-called compatible solutes. They comprise a large variety of substances, including amino acids (proline), amino acid derivatives (betaine, ectoine), oligosaccharides (trehalose), and heterosides (glucosylglycerol). Osmoregulated transporters sense intracellular osmotic pressure and respond to hyperosmotic stress by facilitating the inward translocation of compatible solutes across the cell membrane, to restore normal hydration levels. This work presents the first X-ray structure of a member of the Betaine-Choline-Carnitine-Transporter (BCCT) family, BetP. This Na+-coupled symporter from Corynebacterium glutamicum is a highly effective osmoregulated and specific uptake system for glycine-betaine. X-ray structure determination was achieved using single wavelength anomalous dispersion (SAD) of selenium atoms. Selenium was incorporated into the protein during its expression in methione auxotrophic E. coli cells, grown in media supplemented with selenomethionine. SAD data with anomalous signal up to 5 Å led to the detection of 39 selenium sites, which were used to calculate the initial electron density map of the protein. Medium resolution and high data anisotropy made the structure determination of BetP a challenging task. A specific strategy for data anisotropy correction and a combination of various crystallographic programs were necessary to obtain an interpretable electron density map suitable for model building. The crystal structure of BetP shows a trimer with glycine-betaine bound in a three-fold cation-pi interaction built by conserved tryptophan residues. The bound substrate is occluded from both sides of the membrane and aromatic side chains line its transport pathway. Very interestingly, the structure reveals that the alpha-helical C-terminal domain, for which a chemo- and osmosensory function was elucidated by biochemical methods, interacts with cytoplasmic loops of an adjacent monomer. These unexpected monomer-monomer interactions are thought to be crucial for the activation mechanism of BetP, and a new atomic model combing biochemical results with the crystal structure is proposed. BetP is shown to have the same overall fold as three unrelated Na+-coupled symporters. While these were crystallised in either the outward- or inward-facing conformation, BetP reveals a unique intermediate state, opening new perspectives on the alternating access mechanism of transport.
Despite the well-known importance of ribonucleic acids (RNA) in cell biology, it is astounding to realize the pace at which new fundamental functions of RNAs have been discovered. One of the fundamental reasons for the multitude of functions of RNA is the property of RNA to adopt different conformations or folds. The primary sequence of RNA, a linear polymer built from four different repetition units, can fold into alternate secondary structure motifs which in turn form alternate long-range interactions in complex tertiary structures. Ligands such as metal ions or small molecular weight metabolites and also proteins or peptides can bind to RNA and induce the changes in tertiary conformation. For example, in the cell, RNA participates in gene regulation in the form of riboswitches. Riboswitches are found in untranslated regions of messenger RNA (mRNA) and adopt alternate conformations depending on the presence or absence of specific metabolites. If a metabolite is present above a specific concentration, it induces a conformational change in the respective riboswitch by binding and thereby alters gene expression. Another example is the RNA thermometer which participates in the cell translational mechanism by a similar strategy. Translation initiation requires the binding of RNA thermometers to the ribosome. The ribosome binding region is located in the 5’ untranslated region of mRNA. At low temperatures this region is prevented from binding to the ribosome by forming basepairs. At higher temperatures, these basepairs dissociate allowing ribosome binding and subsequent translation. Therefore, the characterization and delineation of the kinetics and pathway of RNA folding is important to understand the function of RNA and is an important contribution to fundamentally understand RNA’s role in the cell. RNA conformational transitions occur over a wide range of timescales. Depending on the timescale, various biophysical techniques are used to study RNA conformational transitions. In these biophysical studies, achieving good structural and temporal resolution constitute frequently encountered challenges or limitations. For example, single molecule FRET spectroscopy provides high temporal resolution in the milliseconds at high sensitivity but lacks atomic resolution. Recent advances in the field of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy have enabled the elucidation of tertiary folding events to be characterized with atomic resolution. This thesis involves the use of NMR spectroscopy to characterize the folding of RNA molecules. Kinetics experiments require rapid initiation of the kinetics followed by monitoring of the reaction. In this thesis, two different folding initiation techniques have been applied and coupled to the subsequent detection of RNA folding using NMR spectroscopy, namely, photocaging and rapid mixing. The method of photocaging is well established (Kuhn and Schwalbe, 2000) and builds on the following principle: A photolabile moiety is attached to a molecule that prevents a specific interaction. Upon irradiation of the molecule with the photolabile group using laser light at a specific wave length, at which the molecule of interest is not absorbing, the protecting group is released. In our group, together with the group of S. Pitsch, ETH Lausanne, we could "cage" RNA at its equilibrium state by a photolabile molecule (similar work has been carried out in the group of A. Heckel). Rapid and traceless release of the photolabile precursor compound by a laser pulse releases the RNA to fold into its native state; the build-up of the native state of the RNA is monitored by NMR signals that are uniquely characteristic for the native state of the RNA. By optically coupling a laser source to an NMR magnet, the above procedure can take place in situ and the kinetics recorded by NMR. Several different molecules can be caged: The photocage can be attached to RNA. Then, a modified photolabile nucleotide can be placed at strategic positions of a target RNA whose folding properties is to be studied. The photocage can also be attached to a ligand: if folding is dependent on ligand binding then the ligand can be modified to carry a photosensitive unit whose degradation allows binding to RNA. In this thesis, an alternative method for photocaging is introduced. Here, metal ions essential for folding of the RNA are photocaged using the photolabile chelating agent Dimethyl-nitrophen (DMN). Photolysis of DMNr releases the metal ion, thereby RNA folding is initiated. In the rapid-mixing technique, one of (several) components required for proper folding of the RNA is rapidly injected into an NMR sample in situ by the use of a pneumatic injection device. ...
Zusammenfassung Die Alzheimersche Krankheit (AD) ist mit 60% die am häufigsten auftretende Art der Demenz. Weltweit sind ca. 24 Mio. Menschen von der neurodegenerativen Krankheit betroffen, welche sich durch den Verlust der kognitiven Fähigkeiten auszeichnet. Es gibt zwei Ausprägungen der Demenz, zum einen die sporadische Verlaufsform, die bei Menschen in einem Alter ab 65 Jahren auftritt und zum anderen die familiäre Alzheimersche Krankheit (FAD), die schon weitaus jüngere Menschen betrifft und auf genetische Mutationen zurück zu führen ist. Beide Formen der Demenz zeigen den gleichen neuropathologische Phänotyp, der zur Ausbildung von extrazellulären Plaques und intrazellulären Neurofibrillen führt. Durch die Entstehung der Plaques und der Neurofibrillen werden die Verbindungen zwischen den einzelnen Neuronen verringert und die Neuronen sterben ab. Für das Auftreten der FAD sind Mutationen in den Genen des Amyloid Vorläufer Proteins (APP, Substrat) sowie der Aspartatprotease Einheit des γ-Sekretase Komplexes, Presenilin 1 (PS1) oder Presenilin 2 (PS2), verantwortlich. Die γ-Sekretase ist ein membranständiger Komplex bestehend aus den vier Untereinheiten PS1 oder PS2, Nicastrin (Nct), Aph-1 und Pen-2. Um ausreichende Informationen über den γ-Sekretase Komplex bezüglich seiner Interaktionsflächen, seines Katalysemechanismus und seiner Substraterkennung zu erhalten, wäre es hilfreich seine 3 Dimensionale Struktur aufzuklären, wozu große Mengen der sauberen und homogenen Proteine benötigt werden. Die Herstellung von ausreichenden Proteinmengen stellt derzeit aber einen Engpass für die strukturelle und funktionelle Charakterisierung des γ-Sekretase Komplexes in-vitro dar. Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia, which affects 24 million people worldwide. It is a neurodegenerative disorder, which occurs either in its most common form in people over 65 years or in the rare early-onset familial AD (FAD). Responsible for the autosomal dominant FAD are mutations in the genes encoding for the β-amyloid precursor protein (APP) and the two homologues integral membrane proteins Presenilin 1 (PS1) and Presenilin 2 (PS2). The two PSs are major but alternative components of the intramembrane aspartyl protease γ-secretase. Further components are the membrane proteins Nicastrin (Nct), Aph-1 and Pen-2. Production of sufficient amounts of protein samples is still the major bottleneck for the detailed functional and structural in-vitro characterization of the γ-secretase complex. Due to toxicity, stability and targeting problems, the overproduction of MPs in conventional in-vivo systems often has only limited success. Therefore, efficient expression protocols using the cell-free (CF) system were established in this work. After optimization, I was able to produce up to milligram amounts of the single proteins PS1 and PS2, the cleavage products PS1-NTF and PS1-CTF, and Pen-2. The in-vitro produced γ-secretase subunits were further characterized, concerning their purity, secondary fold, thermal stability and homogeneity. Highest purities with over 90% after affinity chromatography could be achieved for PS1-CTF and Pen-2. Reconstitution of PS1, PS1-NTF, PS1-CTF and Pen-2 into E. coli liposomes results in a homogeneously distribution, which gives evidence for a structural folding. This was confirmed by CD spectroscopy of PS1-CTF and Pen-2. The thermal stability of Pen-2 shows a transition at 68°C, whereas PS1-CTF is stable up to 95°C. Both proteins show in addition homogeneous elution profiles investigated by analytical SEC and exhibit a monomeric (Pen-2) or dimeric (PS1-CTF) character analyzed by blue native PAGE. Different methods were performed to get evidence about the assembly of the complex, like pull-down experiments, immunoprecipitation, co-expression of radioactive labeled subunits and titration assays by liquid-state NMR. First hints for an interaction of the CF synthesized proteins could be observed by co-expression. Supplemental, Pen-2 and CTF could be purified in sufficient amounts and to apparent homogeneity that allow structural approaches by X-ray crystallography and liquid-state NMR spectroscopy. First conditions for protein crystals were achieved for Pen-2 and structural investigations of PS1-CTF by liquid-state NMR could be performed after optimization of the expression-, purification- and detergent conditions.
Background: Nitric oxide (NO) is an essential vasodilator. In vascular diseases, oxidative stress attenuates NO signaling by both chemical scavenging of free NO and oxidation and down-regulation of its major intracellular receptor, the alpha/beta heterodimeric heme-containing soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC). Oxidation can also induce loss of sGC's heme and responsiveness to NO.
Results: sGC activators such as BAY 58-2667 bind to oxidized/heme-free sGC and reactivate the enzyme to exert disease-specific vasodilation. Here we show that oxidation-induced down-regulation of sGC protein extends to isolated blood vessels. Mechanistically, degradation was triggered through sGC ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation. The heme-binding site ligand, BAY 58-2667, prevented sGC ubiquitination and stabilized both alpha and beta subunits.
Conclusion: Collectively, our data establish oxidation-ubiquitination of sGC as a modulator of NO/cGMP signaling and point to a new mechanism of action for sGC activating vasodilators by stabilizing their receptor, oxidized/heme-free sGC.
A generic drug product (World Health Organization (WHO) terminology: multisource product) is usually marketed and manufactured after the expiry date of the innovator’s patent. Generic drugs are less expensive than the innovator products because generic manufacturers do not have to amortize the investment costs of research, development, marketing, and promotion. Multisource products must contain the same active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) as the original formulation and have to be shown to be interchangeable with the original formulation. Multisource products have to be shown bioequivalent to the innovator counterpart with respect to pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties. Multisource products are therefore identical in dose, strength, route of administration, safety, efficacy, and intended use. Bioequivalence can be demonstrated by in vitro dissolution, pharmacokinetic, pharmacodynamic or clinical studies. Since 2000, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) allows the approval of certain multisource products solely on the basis of in vitro studies, i.e. by waiving in vivo studies in humans (“Biowaiver”), based on the Biopharmaceutics Classification Scheme (BCS). The BCS characterizes APIs by their solubility and permeability in the gastrointestinal tract (GIT). The different BCS Classes I-IV (Class I: high solubility, high permeability; Class II: low solubility, high permeability; Class III: high solubility, low permeability and Class IV: low solubility, low permeability) result from all possible combinations of high and low solubility with high and low permeability. Since the adoption of the BCS by the FDA in 1995, the BCS criteria have been under continuous development. In 2006, the WHO has released the most recent bioequivalence guidance including relaxed criteria for bioequivalence studies based on modified BCS criteria. According to this guidance, APIs belonging to the BCS classes I – and under defined conditions - II and III – are eligible for a biowaiver-based approval. The principal objective of this work was to characterize the first-line anti tuberculosis APIs, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, ethambutol dihydrochloride and rifampicin, according to their physicochemical, biopharmaceutical, pharmacokinetic and pharmacological properties and to classify them according to the BCS. Ethambutol dihydrochloride and isoniazid were classified as borderline BCS class I/III APIs. Pyrazinamide was classified as a BCS class III and rifampicin as a BCS class II API. Based on the BCS classification and the additional criteria defined in the WHO bioequivalence guidance, the possibility of biowaiver-based approval for immediate release (immediate release) solid oral dosage forms containing the first-line antituberculosis drugs was evaluated. A biowaiver-based approval with defined constraints was recommended for immediate release solid oral dosage forms containing isoniazid (interaction with reducing sugars), pyrazinamide and ethambutol dihydrochloride (relative narrow therapeutic index). Rifampicin was classified as a BCS class II API, and it was concluded that rifampicin containing solid oral immediate release drug products as well as Scale-Up and Post-Approval Changes (SUPAC) changes should not be approved by a biowaiver on the following basis: (i) its solubility and dissolution are highly variable due to polymorphism and instability, (ii) concomitant intake of food and antacids reduces its absorption and bioavailability, (iii) no in vitro predictive dissolution test has been found which correlates to in vivo absorption and (iv) several publications reporting cases of non-bioequivalent and bioinequivalent rifampicin products have been located in the literature. Thus, it is recommended that bioequivalence of rifampicin containing solid oral immediate release drug products should be established by in vivo pharmacokinetic studies in humans. This risk-benefit benefit assessment of a biowaiver-based approval was presented as a poster at the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists (AAPS) 2005 and subsequently published as “Biowaiver Monographs” in the Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences. Based on the assessment of the dissolution properties of the antituberculosis drugs for a biowaiver approval, quality control dissolution methodologies for the International Pharmacopoeia (Pharm. Int.) were developed, presented at the WHO expert meeting and adopted in the Pharm. Int. (http://www.who.int/medicines/publications/pharmprep/OMS_TRS_948.pdf). Additionally, preliminary biowaiver recommendations were also developed for four firstline antimalarial drugs listed on the WHO Essential Medicines List (EML): Quinine, as both the hydrochloride and sulphate, and proguanil hydrochloride were classified as borderline BCS class I/III APIs. Since quinine is a narrow therapeutic index drug and many cases of non-bioequivalence have been reported in the literature, a biowaiverbased approval was not recommended. For solid oral immediate release dosage forms containing proguanil a biowaiver-based approval was recommended under the condition that they dissolve very rapidly. Primaquine phosphate was classified as a BCS class I API. Therefore, a biowaiver-based approval was recommended for immediate release solid oral dosage forms containing primaquine phosphate. Mefloquine hydrochloride was classified as a basic, BCS class IV/II API, making it ineligible for the biowaiver. Additionally, reports of non-bioequivalence and a narrow therapeutic index were found in the scientific literature. Consequently, bioequivalence of solid oral immediate release dosage forms containing mefloquine hydrochloride should be established by in vivo pharmacokinetic studies. The results for quinine hydrochloride and sulphate, proguanil hydrochloride, primaquine diphosphate and mefloquine hydrochloride were presented as a poster at the Pharmaceutical Sciences World Congress (PSWC) 2007 and published as a WHO Collaborating Center Report in June 2006. The aim of this project was to collect, evaluate, generate and publish relevant information for a biowaiver-based approval of essential medicines in order to provide a summary to local regulatory authorities. This information complements the selected list of essential medicines by providing information about the biopharmaceutical properties and pharmaceutical quality of solid oral immediate release dosage forms containing these APIs. The aim of the biowaiver project, inspired by the WHO and brought in life by the International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP), is to enable access to essential medicines in standardized quality at an affordable price. In this work, a significant contribution to this aim in the form of four biowaiver monographs for the antituberculosis drugs and several reports on the antimalarials has been achieved.
Background: Microarray analysis still remains a powerful tool to identify new components of the transcriptosome and it has helped to increase the knowledge of targets triggered by stress conditions such as hypoxia and nitric oxide. However, analysis of transcriptional regulatory events remain elusive due to the contribution of altered mRNA stability to gene expression patterns, as well as changes in the half-life of mRNAs, which influence mRNA expression levels and their turn over rates. To circumvent these problems, we have focused on the analysis of newly transcribed (nascent) mRNAs by nuclear run on (NRO), followed by microarray analysis. Result: We identified 188 genes that were significantly regulated by hypoxia, 81 genes were affected by nitric oxide, and 292 genes were induced by the co-treatment of macrophages with both NO and hypoxia. Fourteen genes (Bnip3, Ddit4, Vegfa, Trib3, Atf3, Cdkn1a, Scd1, D4Ertd765e, Sesn2, Son, Nnt, Lst1, Hps6 and Fxyd5) were common to hypoxia and/or nitric oxide treatments, but with different levels of expression. We observed that 166 transcripts were regulated only when cells were co-treated with hypoxia and NO but not with either treatment alone, pointing to the importance of a crosstalk between hypoxia and NO. In addition, both array and proteomics data supported a consistent repression of hypoxia regulated targets by NO. Conclusion: By eliminating the interference of steady state mRNA in gene expression profiling, we increased the sensitivity of mRNA analysis and identified previously unknown hypoxia-induced targets. Gene analysis profiling corroborated the interplay between NO- and hypoxia-induced signalling.
Photo-initiated processes, like photo-excitation and -deexcitation, internal conversion, excitation energy transfer and electron transfer, are of importance in many areas of physics, chemistry and biology. For the understanding of such processes, detailed knowledge of excitation energies, potential energy surfaces and excited state properties of the involved molecules is an essential prerequisite. To obtain these informations, quantum chemical calculations are required. Several quantum chemical methods exist which allow for the calculation of excited states. Most of these methods are computationally costly what makes them only applicable to small molecules. However, many biological systems where photo-processes are of interest like light-harvesting complexes in photosynthesis or the reception of light in the human eye by rhodopsin are quite large. For large systems, however, only few theoretical methods remain applicable. The currently most widely used method is time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT), which can treat systems of up to 200–300 atoms with the excitation energies of some excited states exhibiting errors of less than 0.5 eV. Yet, TD-DFT has several drawbacks. The most severe failure of TD-DFT is the false description of charge transfer states which is particularly problematic in case of larger systems where it yields a multitude of artificially low-lying charge transfer states. But also Rydberg states and states with large double excitation character are not described correctly. Still, if these deficiencies are kept in mind during the interpretation of results, TD-DFT is a useful tool for the calculation of excited states. In my thesis, TD-DFT is applied in investigations of excitation energy and electron transfer processes in light-harvesting complexes. Since light-harvesting complexes, which consist of thousands of atoms, are by far too large to be calculated, model complexes for the processes of interest are constructed from available crystal structures. The model complexes are used to calculate potential energy curves along meaningful reaction coordinates. Artificial charge transfer states are corrected with the help of the so-called ∆DFT method. The resulting potential energy curves are then interpreted by comparison with experimental results. For the light-harvesting complex LH2 from purple bacteria the experimentally observed formation of carotenoid radical cations is studied. It is shown that the carotenoid radical cation is formed most likely via the optically forbidden S1 state of the carotenoid. In light-harvesting complex LHC-II of green plants the fast component of the so-called non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) is investigated. Two of several different hypotheses on the mechanism of NPQ, which have been proposed recently, are studied in detail. The first one suggests that NPQ proceeds via simple replacement of violaxanthin by zeaxanthin in the binding pocket in LHC-II. However, the calculated potential energy curves exhibit no difference between violaxanthin and zeaxanthin in the binding pocket. In combination with experimental results it is thus shown that simple replacement alone does not mediate NPQ in LHC-II. The second hypothesis proposes conformational changes of LHC-II that lead to quenching at the central lutein and chlorophyll molecules during NPQ. My TD-DFT calculations demonstrate that if this mechanism is operative, only the lutein 1 which is one of two central luteins present in LHC-II can take part in the quenching process. This is corroborated by recent experiments. Though several conclusions can be drawn from the investigations using TD-DFT, the interpretability of the results is limited due to the deficiencies of the method and of the models. To overcome the methodological deficiencies, more accurate methods have to be employed. Therefore, the so-called algebraic diagrammatic construction scheme (ADC) is implemented. ADC is a widely overlooked ab initio method for the calculation of excited states, which is based on propagator theory. Its theoretical derivation proceeds via perturbation expansion of the polarization propagator, which describes electronic excitations. This yields separate schemes for every order of perturbation theory. The second order scheme ADC(2), which is employed here, is the equivalent to the Møller-Plesset ground state method MP(2), but for excited states. It represents the computationally cheapest excited state method which can correctly describe doubly excited states, as well as Rydberg and charge transfer states. The quality of ADC(2) results is demonstrated in calculations on linear polyenes which serve as model systems for the larger carotenoid molecules. The calculations show that ADC(2) describes the three lowest excited states of polyenes sufficiently well, particularly the optically forbidden S1 state which is known to possess large double excitation character. Yet, the applicability of the method is limited compared to TD-DFT due to the much larger computational requirements. To facilitate the calculation of larger systems with ADC(2) a new variant of the method is developed and implemented. The variant employs the short-range behavior of electron correlation to reduce the computational effort. As a first step, the working equations of ADC(2) are transformed into a basis of local orbitals. In this basis negligible contributions of the equations which are due to electron correlation can be identified based on the distances of local orbitals. A so-called “bumping” scheme is implemented which removes the negligible parts during a calculation. This way, the computation times as well as the disk space requirements can be reduced. With the “bumping” scheme several new parameters are introduced that regulate the amount of “bumping” and thereby the speed and the accuracy of computations. To determine useful values for the parameters an evaluation is performed using the linear polyene octatetraene as test molecule. From the evaluation an optimal set of parameter values is obtained, so that the computation times become minimal, while the errors in the excitation energies due to the “bumping” do not exceed 0.15 eV. With further calculations on various molecules of different sizes it is tested if these parameter values are universal, i.e. if they can be used for all molecules. The test calculations show that the errors in the excitation energies are below 0.15 eV for all test systems. Additionally, no trend is visible for the errors that their magnitude might depend on the system. In contrast, the amount of disregarded contributions in the calculations increases drastically with growing system size. Thus, the local variant of ADC(2) can be used in future to reliably calculate excited states of systems which are not accessible with conventional ADC(2).
In the title compound, C27H20F6N2O2, the dihedral angles between the planes of the aromatic rings connected by the ether O atoms are 84.13 (8) and 75.06 (9)°. The crystal structure is stabilized by N-H...O and N-H...F hydrogen bonds. Key indicators: single-crystal X-ray study; T = 173 K; mean σ(C–C) = 0.004 Å; R factor = 0.037; wR factor = 0.088; data-to-parameter ratio = 8.2.
In the title compound, C17H12F2N2OS, the planar thiazole ring (r.m.s. deviation = 0.012 Å) makes dihedral angles of 15.08 (9) and 81.81 (6)° with the 4-fluorophenyl and 2-fluorophenyl rings, respectively. The 2-fluorophenyl ring is disordered over two orientations with site-occupancy factors of 0.810 (3) and 0.190 (3). The structure contains intermolecular C-H...O hydrogen bonds. Key indicators: single-crystal X-ray study; T = 173 K; mean σ(C–C) = 0.003 Å; disorder in main residue; R factor = 0.034; wR factor = 0.082; data-to-parameter ratio = 16.1.