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Die einzelnen Forschungsprojek
te sollen den breit aufgestellten Anwendungsbereich der Röntgenpulverdiffraktometrie im Bereich der Klärung von wissenschaftlichen Problemstellungen mit weiteren Beispielen komplementieren. Weiter soll die Nutzung der Synergie aus der kombinierten Anwendung von diversen strukturaufklärenden Methoden an polykristallinen Festkörpern aufgezeigt werden. Verwendet werden dazu Testsubstanzen aus verschiedenen, breit gefächerten Stoffklassen. Zum Einen wird die erfolgreiche Kristallstrukturbestimmung aus Röntgenpulverbeugungsdaten an einem diradikalischen Azobenzol-Derivates 1 (4-4'-Diazendiylbis[(1,4-phenyl)-bis-(carbonyloxy)]bis(2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidinyloxidanyl) gezeigt. Die Substanzklasse der diradikalischen Verbindungen ist für die Bestimmung von Radikal-Radikal-Abständen per EPR-Methoden (electron paramagnetic resonance) sehr wichtig. Zur Validierung der ermittelten Abstände aus den EPR-Messungen musste der Radikal-Radikal-Abstand vorab bekannt sein. Der intramolekulare Radikal-Radikal-Abstand von 23,658(6) Å. welcher im gewünschten Radikal-Radikal-Abstandsbereich für EPR-Messungen liegt, somit konnte 1 als Testsubstanz für Abstandsbestimmungen mittels EPR validiert werden. Die vorliegende
Kristallstruktur wurde in der Raumgruppe P21/c (Z = 2, Z’ = 0,5) mit a = 19,3355(5) Å, b = 5,9277(2) Å, c = 14,5264(4) Å, β = 109,22(1)° und einem Volumen V = 1572,12(8) ų ermittelt. Der Molekülmittelpunkt von 1 liegt auf einem kristallographischen Inversionszentrum und das aromatische Fragment von Estergruppe zu Estergruppe bildet annähernd eine Ebene. Anhand der Kristallstrukturbestimmung aus Röntgenpulverbeugungsdaten soll die
Lokalisierung eines Wasserstoffatoms in direkter Nachbarschaft zu Molekülfragmenten mit einer hohen Anzahl an Chlorsubstituenten untersucht werden. Am Beispiel der Bestimmung des tautomeren Zustands des achtfach chlorierten Color Index Pigment Yellow 138 (P.Y. 138) kann die Synergie aus quantenchemischen Rechnungen, Festkörper-NMR-Messungen und der Kristallstrukturbestimmung aus Röntgenpulverbeugungsdaten gezeigt werden. Hierbei wurden unter anderen unterschiedliche Kristallstrukturverfeinerungsstrategien zur Ermittlung des tautomeren Zustands entwickelt und angewendet. P.Y. 138 liegt in der monoklinen Raumgruppe P21/c (Z = 4, Z’ = 1) mit a = 19,3750(5) Å, b = 7,8516(1) Å, c = 16,9704(4) Å, β = 105,649(2)° und V = 2485,9(1) ų als NH-Tautomer vor. Es bilden sich Molekülschichten parallel zur (100)-Ebene aus. Innerhalb der Schichten wirken Van-der-Waals-Kräfte; zwischen den Schichten dominieren Typ I Cl⋯Cl-Wechselwirkungen. An dem pharmazeutisch aktiven Wirkstoffes Flupirtinmaleat wird die immer noch hohe Relevanz der Röntgenpulverdiffraktometrie bei einer Polymorphiesuche gezeigt. Flupirtinmaleat ist aufgrund seiner analgetischen Wirkung, ohne typische weitere Eigenschaften von Schmerzmittel wie beispielsweise opiode oder herzrhythmusbeeinflussende aufzuweisen, eine höchst interessante Substanz. Neue Polymorphe können bessere Eigenschaften als die Ausgangsphase aufweisen oder auch den wirtschaftlichen Nutzen erhöhen, da diese patentierbar oder kostengünstiger und ressourcenschonender in der Herstellung sein können. Für das Flupirtinmaleat-Projekt wurden Aufnahme und Auswertung von Röntgenpulverdiffraktogrammen als standardisierte analytische Methoden zur Bestimmung von neuen kristallinen Phasen bei einer sehr großen Probenanzahl von über 500 Einzelversuchen, welche bei Polymorphiesuchen aufkommt, genutzt. Von der pharmazeutisch aktiven Substanz Flupirtinmaleat ist es gelungen, die neuen Festkörperphasen C, F, G und H zu entdecken. Ebenfalls konnte durch Vermahlungsexperimente Flupirtinbromid erzeugt werden. Des Weiteren wurden die Einkristallstrukturen von Flupirtinmaleat Form A und Flupirtin Phase B bestimmt. Das letzte Projektkapitel zeigt den Beginn einer methodischen Entwicklung zur Konfigurationsbestimmung von chiralen Molekülen aus Röntgenpulverbeugungsdaten. Ziel
der Methode ist es, ein schnelles Verfahren zur Ermittlung der absoluten Konfiguration und Strukturaufklärung von neu entwickelten Substanzen beispielsweise für pharmazeutische Wirkstoffe zu haben. Bei der Einkristallstrukturanalyse kann aus dem Reflexbild anhand von Intensitätsunterschieden spezieller Reflexpaare die Konfiguration einer Verbindung direkt bestimmt werden. Da dies bei Röntgenpulverdiffraktogrammen nicht der Fall ist, kann diese
Methode nicht angewendet werden. Zur Umsetzung des Leitgedankens sollen daher chirale Salze aus der Zielsubstanz mit unbekannter Konfiguration und einem Salzbildner bekannter Chiralität erzeugt werden. Der Drehsinn des bekannten Salzbildners soll sozusagen als
Ankerpunkt für die Bestimmung der absoluten Konfiguration dienen. Da ein Anwendungsschwerpunkt die pharmazeutische Forschung sein könnte, wurden als Grundlage der Methodenentwicklung chirale Testsysteme bestehend aus pharmazeutischen Wirkstoffen und Salzbildnern jeweils mit bekannter Konfiguration. Acht neue Entitäten von verschiedenen Wirkstoff-Salzbildner-Paaren konnten erzeugt und mittels Röntgenpulverbeugungsdaten bestätigt werden. Dies zeigt, dass durch Kristallisation wahrscheinlich durch Salzbildung, neue Entitäten mit einem Ankerpunkten zur späteren Konfigurationsbestimmung erzeugbar sind. Ebenfalls konnten aus Einkristallbeugungsdaten die Kristallstruktur von R-Flurbiprofen und Kristallstrukturen der Salze aus R-Flurbiprofen mit R-Phenylpropylamin und R-Aminoglutethimid mit R-Camphersulfonsäure bestimmt werden. Diese Kristallstrukturen, ganz speziell die der Salze, können im weiteren Verlauf zum Vergleich und/oder zur Validierung mit den Kristallstrukturen aus Röntgenpulverbeugungsdaten dienen. Hervorzuheben sind die Kristallisationsprodukte aus S-Flurbiprofen bzw. R-Flurbiprofen mit R-Phenylpropylamin, da diese voneinander unterscheidbare Röntgenpulverdiffraktogramme aufweisen die enantiomeren Ausgangsstoffe S- und R-Flurbiprofen jedoch nicht. Dies legt nahe, dass es grundsätzlich möglich sein sollte eine Konfigurationsbestimmung aus Röntgenpulverbeugungsdaten durchzuführen.
Riboswitches are an important class of regulatory RNA elements that respond to cellular metabolite concentrations to regulate gene expression in a highly selective manner. 2’-deoxyguanosine-sensing (2’dG) riboswitches represent a unique riboswitch subclass only found in the bacterium Mesoplasma florum and are closely related to adenine- and guanine-sensing riboswitches. The I-A type 2’dG-sensing riboswitch represses the expression of ribonucleotide reductase genes at high cellular concentrations of 2’dG as a result of premature transcription termination.
Increasing evidence within the last decade suggests that transcriptional regulation by riboswitches is controlled kinetically and emphasizes the importance of co-transcriptional folding.2–4 Addition of single nucleotides to nascent transcripts causes a continuous shift in structural equilibrium, where refolding rates are competing with the rate of transcription.5,6
For transcriptional riboswitches, both ligand binding and structural rearrangements within the expression platform are precisely coordinated in time with the rate of transcription. The current thesis investigates the mechanistic details of transcriptional riboswitch regulation using the I-A 2’dG-sensing riboswitch as an example for a riboswitch that acts under kinetic control.
Biophysical studies of the translation-regulating add adenine riboswitch from Vibrio vulnificus
(2017)
Bacterial gene expression can be regulated at mRNA level by cis-acting mRNA elements termed riboswitches. Riboswitches operate by conformational switching between a ligand-free and a ligand-bound state with different structures that either activate or inhibit gene expression. This PhD thesis contributes to the molecular level understanding of full-length purine riboswitches. It presents biophysical investigations on the ligand-dependent folding of the full-length translation-regulating add adenine riboswitch from the gram-negative human pathogenic marine bacterium Vibrio vulnificus (Asw). Asw has the typical bipartite riboswitch architecture with a 5’ ligand-sensing aptamer domain and a 3’ regulatory domain termed expression platform. According to the working hypothesis, Asw employs a unique thermodynamically-controlled 3-state conformational switching mechanism between an apoB, an apoA and a holo conformation to regulate translation initiation in a temperature-compensated manner. The two apo conformations are the putative translation-OFF states and the holo conformation is the putative translation-ON state of Asw. In the main project of this PhD thesis, an integrated nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and smFRET spectroscopic study of the full-length 112-nucleotide Asw (112Asw) was performed. The adenine-dependent folding of 112Asw was monitored at the level of base pairing interactions by NMR of the RNA imino protons, and at the level of three long-range intramolecular distances by smFRET of immobilized molecules. The integrated NMR and smFRET spectroscopic study of 112Asw yielded two major findings. First, NMR and smFRET both revealed that adenine binding to 112Asw impedes apoB formation by stabilizing the apoA secondary structure in the holo conformation without modulating tertiary structural interactions between the two riboswitch domains. This highlights the central role of competitive P1 and P4 helix formation at the interface of the aptamer and the expression platform for switching the accessibility of the ribosome binding site of 112Asw. Moreover, it strongly corroborates the hypothesis that purine riboswitches in general operate according to the key principle of a spatially decoupled secondary structural allosteric switch that proceeds without ligand-induced tertiary structural interactions between the aptamer domain and the expression platform. Second, it was uncovered by smFRET that the apoA and the holo conformation of 112Asw do not adopt a single folding state at near-physiological Mg2+ concentration. Instead, apoA and holo exhibit a persistent dynamic equilibrium between substates with an undocked (U), a short-lived docked (D1; ~s) and a Mg2+-bound long-lived docked (D2; ~10 s) aptamer kissing loop motif. In the holo conformation, the fractional population of the long-lived docked substate is ~2-fold increased compared to the apoA conformation, but undocked and docked substates are still comparably stable. The here described multiple folding states of the apoA and the holo conformation might have regulatory properties that are in between the apoB translation-OFF state and the holo-D2 translation-ON state. Additonally, an integrated NMR and smFRET analysis of 127-nucleotide Asw (127Asw) is presented. Compared to 112Asw, 127Asw is 3’-elongated by 15 nucleotides of the adenosine deaminase encoding sequence of the add gene from Vibrio vulnificus. 127Asw was chosen as mRNA template for future investigations of the interaction between Asw and the 30S ribosomal subunit. The NMR spectra of 127Asw demonstrated that 127Asw has the same overall secondary structure as 112Asw. Like for 112Asw, the combined NMR and smFRET analysis of 127Asw showed that adenine binding impedes apoB formation and stabilizes a long-lived docked aptamer kissing loop fold. However, compared to 112Asw, 127Asw has a destabilized aptamer kissing loop motif and a stabilized P4 helix in the expression platform. Finally, ligand-observed studies of the transient encounter complex between Asw and the near-cognate ligand hypoxanthine are described. By competition binding WaterLOGSY NMR experiments with hypoxanthine and the adenine analogue 2,6-diaminopurine, it could be shown that hypoxanthine binds to the same binding site of 112Asw as the cognate ligand adenine. The hypoxanthine binding constant measured with the WaterLOGSY method is in the low mM range (1.8 mM) and substantially exceeds the physiological hypoxanthine concentration in E. coli (~0.3 mM), thus ruling out that hypoxanthine binding can significantly impact the translational regulation of Asw in vivo. Also, preliminary FTIR difference spectra of 13C,15N-labelled and unlabelled hypoxanthine in complex with the pbuE adenine riboswitch aptamer and the xpt guanine riboswitch aptamer are discussed. These spectra showed a pattern of multiple IR bands that appeared to be characteristic for the respective complex.
In der organischen Elektronik werden Moleküle mit konjugierten pi-Elektronensystemen als Halbleiter und Lichtemitter eingesetzt. Für die Fabrikation fortschrittlicher elektronischer Bauelemente, wie z. B.organischer Leuchtdioden, werden Materialien mit besonderen optoelektronischen Eigenschaften benötigt.Die Stoffklasse der Arylamine ist für den Transport positiver Ladungen etabliert, da die exozyklischen Stickstoffatome Elektronenlöcher mesomer zu stabilisieren vermögen. Komplementär dazu sind auch Materialien für den Transport negativer Ladungen in der organischen Elektronik unverzichtbar. Zu diesem Zweck sollten borhaltige Verbindungen ideal geeignet sein, da das Element Bor weniger Valenzelektronen als Kohlenstoff besitzt und Arylborane daher im Vergleich zu den entsprechenden Kohlenwasserstoffen eine geringere Elektronendichte aufweisen. Als Halbleitermaterialien sind Arylborane jedoch nicht so weit verbreitet wie Arylamine, da die Instabilität vieler Vertreter gegenüber Luft und Feuchtigkeit sowie der Mangel an effizienten Synthesemethoden ihre Anwendung verzögert haben. Um geeignete organische Elektronenleiter bereitzustellen, ist die Entwicklung stabiler, pi-konjugierter Borane erstrebenswert. Ansatzpunkte für diese Arbeit waren Erkenntnisse aus der vorangegangenen Masterarbeit, sowie Beispiele für hydrolysestabile Arylborane, welche in der jüngeren Vergangenheit von M. Wagner et al. Und S. Yamaguchi et al. veröffentlicht wurden. Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit gelang die Entwicklung einer modularen Synthesestrategie, die einen vielseitigen Zugang zur Stoffklasse der borhaltigen polyzyklischen aromatischen Kohlenwasserstoffe (PAKs) ermöglicht: Ausgehend von einem gut verfügbaren siliziumhaltigen Startmaterial und diversen, zum Großteil kommerziell erhältlichen, Carbonylverbindungen wurden mehr als zwanzig verschiedene Triarylborane dargestellt. Dabei wurde eine Auswahl spezieller Reaktionstypen nach den jeweiligen Erfordernissen in geeigneter Weise miteinander kombiniert. Zu diesen gehörte die Peterson-Olefinierung zum Aufbau drei- und vierfach substituierter Alkene, die Photozyklisierung der resultierenden Stilben-artigen Verbindungen, eine Ru(II)-katalysierte Reaktion zur Benzanellierung und der Silizium/Bor Austausch mittels BBr3. An wichtigen Zwischenprodukten wurden Reaktivitätsstudien durchgeführt, um die Anwendungsmöglichkeiten und Einschränkungen dieser Synthesestrategie zu ergründen. Um die Stabilität der Produkte gegenüber Luft und Feuchtigkeit zu gewährleisten, wurden die reaktiven Borzentren in bewährter Weise durch Einführung eines sterisch anspruchsvollen Mesitylsubstituenten kinetisch abgeschirmt. Die überwiegende Zahl der synthetisierten borhaltigen PAKs erwies sich als absolut unempfindlich gegenüber Wasser und konnte mit den gängigen Methoden der organischen Chemie (z. B. Säulenchromatographie an Kieselgel) gereinigt werden. Als Alternative zur sterischen Abschirmung wurde der Einbau des Boratoms in ein starres Molekülgerüst an einem Ausführungsbeispiel verwirklicht. Diese zweite Möglichkeit der Stabilisierung stellte sich in Bezug auf die Eigenschaften des Produkts als vergleichbar heraus, erforderte aber einen größeren synthetischen Aufwand und lieferte eine geringere Ausbeute über die gesamte Reaktionssequenz. Die in dieser Arbeit dargestellten borhaltigen PAKs wurden mittels Röntgenkristallographie umfassend strukturell charakterisiert. Die intensiv genutzten Methoden Cyclovoltammetrie, UV/vis- und Fluoreszenzspektroskopie gewährten zusätzlich einen detaillierten Einblick in ihre elektronischen Strukturen. Die Synthese und systematische Variation der Moleküle führten zu neuen Erkenntnissen über grundlegende Struktur-Eigenschafts-Beziehungen. Insbesondere zeigten diese Vergleiche, dass in ladungsneutralen Triarylboranen keine Delokalisation der pi-Elektronen über das leere p-Orbital eines Boratoms stattfindet. Von entscheidender Bedeutung für die elektronische Struktur borhaltiger PAKs ist das Gerüst aus sp2-hybridisierten Kohlenstoffatomen: Wenn mindestens zwei der Arylsubstituenten am Boratom zu einem gemeinsamen Gefüge verbrückt sind, zeigen diese Verbindungen elektronische Übergänge im sichtbaren Bereich des elektromagnetischen Spektrums und in den meisten Fällen auch eine intensive Fluoreszenz. Des Weiteren besitzen diese borhaltigen PAKs eine hohe Elektronenaffinität und lassen sich elektrochemisch reversibel reduzieren. Damit erfüllen sie bedeutende Kriterien für eine mögliche Anwendung als Elektronenleiter. Von den Molekülen mit ausgedehntem pi-Elektronensystem ließen sich manche zusätzlich reversibel oxidieren und zeichnen sich daher durch eine außergewöhnlich hohe elektrochemische Stabilität aus. An Arylboranen, deren Farbe sich durch externe Stimuli verändern lässt, wurden grundlegende Untersuchungen im Kontext der molekularen Sensorik durchgeführt. Einige der synthetisierten Verbindungen ändern ihr Absorptions- und Emissionsspektrum bei Kontakt mit Fluorid-Ionen, bei Oxidation integrierter Schwefelatome durch ein Carbonsäureperoxid, bei elektrochemischer Reduktion oder in Abhängigkeit der Polarität ihrer Umgebung. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit wurden in vier Fachartikeln beschrieben und veröffentlicht (siehe Anhang). Sie können zu einem besseren Verständnis der elektronischen Eigenschaften borhaltiger PAKs beitragen und die Entwicklung neuer Halbleitermaterialien auf der Basis dieser Stoffklasse erleichtern.
To study the implications of highly space-demanding organic moieties on the properties of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs), triptycyl thiolates and selenolates with and without methylene spacers on Au(111) surfaces were comprehensively studied using ultra-high vacuum infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy and thermal desorption spectroscopy. Due to packing effects, the molecules in all monolayers are substantially tilted. In the presence of a methylene spacer the tilt is slightly less pronounced. The selenolate monolayers exhibit smaller defect densities and therefore are more densely packed than their thiolate analogues. The Se–Au binding energy in the investigated SAMs was found to be higher than the S–Au binding energy.
The asymmetric unit of the title compound, C18H18I2N2O2, consists of one half-molecule, completed by the application of inversion symmetry. The molecule adopts the typical structure for this class of bis-benxozazines, characterized by an anti orientation of the two benzoxazine rings around the central C—C bond. The oxazinic ring adopts a half-chair conformation. In the crystal, molecules are linked by C—I⋯N short contacts [I⋯N = 3.378 (2) Å], generating layers lying parallel to the bc plane.
Denisovite is a rare mineral occurring as aggregates of fibres typically 200–500 nm diameter. It was confirmed as a new mineral in 1984, but important facts about its chemical formula, lattice parameters, symmetry and structure have remained incompletely known since then. Recently obtained results from studies using microprobe analysis, X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD), electron crystallography, modelling and Rietveld refinement will be reported. The electron crystallography methods include transmission electron microscopy (TEM), selected-area electron diffraction (SAED), high-angle annular dark-field imaging (HAADF), high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM), precession electron diffraction (PED) and electron diffraction tomography (EDT). A structural model of denisovite was developed from HAADF images and later completed on the basis of quasi-kinematic EDT data by ab initio structure solution using direct methods and least-squares refinement. The model was confirmed by Rietveld refinement. The lattice parameters are a = 31.024 (1), b = 19.554 (1) and c = 7.1441 (5) Å, β = 95.99 (3)°, V = 4310.1 (5) Å3 and space group P12/a1. The structure consists of three topologically distinct dreier silicate chains, viz. two xonotlite-like dreier double chains, [Si6O17]10−, and a tubular loop-branched dreier triple chain, [Si12O30]12−. The silicate chains occur between three walls of edge-sharing (Ca,Na) octahedra. The chains of silicate tetrahedra and the octahedra walls extend parallel to the z axis and form a layer parallel to (100). Water molecules and K+ cations are located at the centre of the tubular silicate chain. The latter also occupy positions close to the centres of eight-membered rings in the silicate chains. The silicate chains are geometrically constrained by neighbouring octahedra walls and present an ambiguity with respect to their z position along these walls, with displacements between neighbouring layers being either Δz = c/4 or −c/4. Such behaviour is typical for polytypic sequences and leads to disorder along [100]. In fact, the diffraction pattern does not show any sharp reflections with l odd, but continuous diffuse streaks parallel to a* instead. Only reflections with l even are sharp. The diffuse scattering is caused by (100) nanolamellae separated by stacking faults and twin boundaries. The structure can be described according to the order–disorder (OD) theory as a stacking of layers parallel to (100).
If the biotechnological production of chemicals can further replace or support regular synthetic chemistry, industry will be able to move away from fossil oils towards renewable sources. However, in many cases the much needed adaptation of biotechnological production systems is not yet developed to the necessary level.
For processes where short fatty acids (FA) are needed, as for example in the microbial production of biofuels in the gasoline range, protein engineering had not yet delivered feasible solutions. In this thesis, several approaches to introduce chain length control on type I fatty acid synthases (FAS) were established and made available in a publication and two patents. Therein, engineering was focused on rational design based on available structural information.
First, the type I FAS from C. ammoniagenes was used as a model enzyme to probe modifications on FAS in a low complex in vitro environment in order to gain information about structure-function relationships. At this stage, engineering was conducted in several rounds, first addressing possible ways to alter product distributions by changing substrate affinities through concise mutations in binding channels. Several FAS constructs were generated ranging from first successes, where short FA were produced as side products, to FAS where native chain length programming was overwritten and only short FA were produced.
Furthermore, another engineering target was addressed with the modification of domain-domain interactions on FAS. For its exploitation to direct synthesis, contact surfaces on catalytic domains were changed to interfere with acyl carrier protein binding. This channeling of the kinetic process on the enzyme led to similar successes and short FA became the primary product.
The two approaches have proven to be potent tools to introduce systems of chain length control in FAS. This rational engineering has the big advantage that it is mostly minimally invasive and due to the high conservation of de novo FA synthesis, individual mutations could easily be used in other FAS (and their organisms) as well. Even heterologous expression of modified FAS genes is feasible.
Engineering was not only tested in a defined in vitro environment and but also in S. cerevisiae as an exemplary in vivo system. The results eventually confirmed the in vitro findings and proved that the chosen engineering could be transferred to more complex systems. Even before any optimization for highest output, the titers of short FA from S. cerevisiae fermentation matched previous reports with 118 mg/L.
In sum, this work covers several layers from basic research to preliminary applications. The presented modifications to create short FA producing FAS can be a key step in synthesis pathways and will likely enable a whole range of new succeeding research. It can be seen as a valuable contribution towards establishing novel ways for the production of chemicals from renewable sources.
Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) is a ligand that activates, through co-receptor GDNF family receptor alpha-1 (GFRα1) and receptor tyrosine kinase “RET”, several signaling pathways crucial in the development and sustainment of multiple neuronal populations. We decided to study whether non-mammalian orthologs of these three proteins have conserved their function: can they activate the human counterparts? Using the baculovirus expression system, we expressed and purified Danio rerio RET, and its binding partners GFRα1 and GDNF, and Drosophila melanogaster RET and two isoforms of co-receptor GDNF receptor-like. Our results report high-level insect cell expression of post-translationally modified and dimerized zebrafish RET and its binding partners. We also found that zebrafish GFRα1 and GDNF are comparably active as mammalian cell-produced ones. We also report the first measurements of the affinity of the complex to RET in solution: at least for zebrafish, the Kd for GFRα1-GDNF binding RET is 5.9 μM. Surprisingly, we also found that zebrafish GDNF as well as zebrafish GFRα1 robustly activated human RET signaling and promoted the survival of cultured mouse dopaminergic neurons with comparable efficiency to mammalian GDNF, unlike E. coli-produced human proteins. These results contradict previous studies suggesting that mammalian GFRα1 and GDNF cannot bind and activate non-mammalian RET and vice versa.
The centerpiece of all neuronal processes is the synaptic transmission. It consists of a complex series of events. Two key elements are the binding of synaptic vesicles (SV) to the presynaptic membrane and the subsequent fusion of the two membranes. SV are neurotransmitter-filled membranous spheres with many integral and peripheral proteins. The synaptic SNARE complex consists of three interacting proteins, which energize and regulate the fusion of the SV membrane with the presynaptic membrane. Both processes are closely orchestrated to ensure a specific release of neurotransmitter. Already many experiments have been performed, such as genetic screens and proteome analysis of SV, to determine the functions of the various proteins involved. Nevertheless, the functions of the identified proteins are still not fully elucidated. The aim of this thesis was initially applying a tandem affinity purification (TAP) of SV to identify unknown interaction partner of SV and to determine their role. This was supposed to be performed in the model organism Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans). The underlying mechanisms are conserved throughout the phylogentic tree and identified interaction partners will help to understand the processes in the mammalian brain. Although there is no neuron-rich tissue in C. elegans as in other model organisms, the diverse genetic methods allows a rapid creation of modified organisms and a prompt determination of the function of identified proteins. The integral SV protein synaptogyrin has been fused to a TAP-tag. The TAP-tag consists of a ProteinA, a TEV protease cleavage site and a calmodulin binding peptide (CBP). Both affinity purification steps are performed sequentially and allow a highly specific native purification of proteins and their interaction partners. Due to technical difficulties the purification strategy was modified several times during the course of this thesis and then finally abandoned for a more promising project, the SNARE complex purification. In conclusion, one of the reasons was the necessary lack of detergent.
The amended aim of this thesis has been the TAP of solubilized SNARE complex to identify unknown interaction partner and to determine their role. In order to increase the specificity of the purification, in terms of formed complexes, the two SNARE subunits, synaptobrevin (SNB-1 in C. elegans) and syntaxin (UNC-64 in C. elegans), were separately fused to the different affinity tags. As the modifications of the proteins could impair their function and lead to false interaction partners, their functionality was tested. For this purpose, the corresponding fusion constructs were expressed in strains with mutated snb¬1 and unc-64. Non-functional synaptic proteins display an altered course of paralysis in an aldicarb assay. The fusion proteins which were expressed in their respective mutant strains displayed a near to wild-type (WT) behavior in contrast to the naive mutant strains. Multiple TAP demonstrated SNB-1 signals in Western blot analysis and complex sets of proteins in the final elution step in a silver staining of SDS-PAGEs. These samples were sent with negative control (WT purification) for MS analysis to various cooperation partners. 119 proteins were identified which appeared only in data sets with SNARE proteins and not in WT samples. If proteins were detected in ≥ 2 SNARE positive MS analysis and had known neural functions or homologies to neuronal proteins in other species, they were selected for further analysis. These candidates were knocked down by RNAi and tested for synaptic function in a following aldicarb assay. The treatment with their specific RNAi resulted for mca-3 in a strong resistance, while frm-2, snap-29, ekl-6, klb-8, mdh-2, pfk-2, piki-1 and vamp-8 resulted in hypersensitivity. The most responsive genes frm-2, snap-29 and mca-3 were examined, whether they displayed a co-localization together with synaptobrevin in promoter fusion constructs or functional fusion constructs. In fluorescence microscopy images only MCA-3::YFP demonstrated neuronal expression.
In order to substantiate the synaptic nature and functionality of the MCA-3::YFP a swimming assay was performed. Here, fusion construct expressing strains, which contained mutated mca-3, were compared with untreated mutant strains and WT strains according to their behavior. In this swimming assay a partial restoration of WT behavior was shown in the MCA-3::YFP expressing mutant strains. Based on these data, we discovered with MCA 3 a new interaction partner of the SNARE complex. MCA-3 is a plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase and was initially seen only in their role in the endocytosis. Its new putative role is the reduction of Ca2+ concentration at the bound SNARE complex. Since an interaction of syntaxin with Ca2+ channels has been demonstrated, it would be comprehensible to reduce the local concentration of Ca2+ to a minimum by tethering Ca2+ transporters to the SNARE complex.
Biogenesis of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase (COX) is a complex process involving the coordinate expression and assembly of numerous subunits (SU) of dual genetic origin. Moreover, several auxiliary factors are required to recruit and insert the redox-active metal compounds, which in most cases are buried in their protein scaffold deep inside the membrane. Here we used a combination of gel electrophoresis and pull-down assay techniques in conjunction with immunostaining as well as complexome profiling to identify and analyze the composition of assembly intermediates in solubilized membranes of the bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans. Our results show that the central SUI passes through at least three intermediate complexes with distinct subunit and cofactor composition before formation of the holoenzyme and its subsequent integration into supercomplexes. We propose a model for COX biogenesis in which maturation of newly translated COX SUI is initially assisted by CtaG, a chaperone implicated in CuB site metallation, followed by the interaction with the heme chaperone Surf1c to populate the redox-active metal-heme centers in SUI. Only then the remaining smaller subunits are recruited to form the mature enzyme which ultimately associates with respiratory complexes I and III into supercomplexes.
Differentiated neurons can be rapidly acquired, within days, by inducing stem cells to express neurogenic transcription factors. We developed a protocol to maintain long-term cultures of human neurons, called iNGNs, which are obtained by inducing Neurogenin-1 and Neurogenin-2 expression in induced pluripotent stem cells. We followed the functional development of iNGNs over months and they showed many hallmark properties for neuronal maturation, including robust electrical and synaptic activity. Using iNGNs expressing a variant of channelrhodopsin-2, called CatCh, we could control iNGN activity with blue light stimulation. In combination with optogenetic tools, iNGNs offer opportunities for studies that require precise spatial and temporal resolution. iNGNs developed spontaneous network activity, and these networks had excitatory glutamatergic synapses, which we characterized with single-cell synaptic recordings. AMPA glutamatergic receptor activity was especially dominant in postsynaptic recordings, whereas NMDA glutamatergic receptor activity was absent from postsynaptic recordings but present in extrasynaptic recordings. Our results on long-term cultures of iNGNs could help in future studies elucidating mechanisms of human synaptogenesis and neurotransmission, along with the ability to scale-up the size of the cultures.