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Die Paarverteilungsfunktion (PDF) beschreibt die Wahrscheinlichkeit, zwei Atome eines Materials in einem Abstand r voneinander zu finden. Diese Methode bewährt sich seit längerer Zeit zur Untersuchung von Gläsern, Flüssigkeiten, amorphen, stark fehlgeordneten und nanokristallinen anorganischen Substanzen. Die Anwendung für organische Substanzen ist jedoch relativ neu, mit etwa 20 Veröffentlichungen und Patenten insgesamt.
Im Rahmen dieser Dissertation wurden zwei Methoden zur Strukturverfeinerung und Strukturlösung organischer Substanzen anhand von PDF-Daten erfolgreich entwickelt und an diversen Beispielen validiert. Als erster Schritt hierzu wurde eine Methodenverbesserung vorgenommen. Hierbei handelte es sich um eine Verbesserung der Simulation der PDF-Kurven organischer Verbindungen anhand eines gegebenen Strukturmodells. Mit Hilfe der bisherigen Methoden können die PDF-Kurven anorganischer Substanzen erfolgreich simuliert werden. Für organische Substanzen werden bei Anwendung der bisherigen Methode die Signalbreiten der intramolekularen und intermolekularen Beiträge zu der PDF-Kurve falsch wiedergegeben, dies führt zu einer schlechten Anpassung der simulierten PDF-Daten and die experimentellen PDF-Daten. Deshalb wurde ein neuer Ansatz entwickelt, in welchem für die Berechnung der intramolekularen Beiträge zum PDF-Signal ein anderer isotroper Auslenkungsparameter verwendet wurde, als bei der Berechnung der intermolekularen Beiträge zum PDF-Signal. Mit diesem Ansatz konnte eine sehr gute Simulation der PDF-Kurve für alle Testbeispiele erzielt werden. Zur Strukturverfeinerung organischer Substanzen anhand von PDF-Daten wurden zwei Ansätze entwickelt: der Rigid-Body-Ansatz zur Behandlung starrer organischer Moleküle und der Restraint-Ansatz zur Behandlung flexibler organischer Moleküle.
Neben methodischen Entwicklungen wurden in dieser Arbeit zwei weitere Untersuchungen organischer Verbindungen mittels PDF-Analyse durchgeführt.
Es wurden drei, auf unterschiedliche Weise hergestellte, amorphe Proben des Wirkstoffes Telmisartan untersucht. Des Weiteren wurde mittels PDF-Analyse eine pharmazeutische Nanosuspension untersucht.
Die chemischen und physikalischen Eigenschaften eines Festkörpers sind vom inneren Aufbau des Festkörpers abhängig. Die Methode der Wahl zur Bestimmung von Kristallstrukturen sind Beugungsexperimente. Fehlordnungen in den Kristallstrukturen werden mit Beugungsexperimenten häufig nur unzureichend ausgewertet oder ignoriert. In dieser Arbeit wurden die (möglichen) Stapelfehlordnungen der Aminosäuren DL-Norleucin und DL-Methionin, sowie von Chloro (phthalocyaninato)aluminium(III) untersucht. Dazu wurden Gitterenergieminimierungen mit Kraftfeld- und quantenchemischen Methoden an einem Satz geordneter Modellstrukturen durchgeführt.
In den Kristallstrukturen der α- und β-Phasen von DL-Norleucin ordnen sich die Moleküle in Doppelschichten an und bilden jeweils eine Schichtstruktur mit unterschiedlicher Stapelsequenz. Röntgenbeugungsexperimente an Kristallen dieser Verbindung zeigen charakteristische diffuse Streuung. Die durchgeführten Gitterenergieminimierungen reproduzieren die experimentelle Stabilitätenreihenfolge der beiden Polymorphe von DL-Norleucin. Die berechneten Gitterenergien zeigen, dass es für DL-Norleucin bevorzugte Stapelsequenzen gibt. Die Gitterenergien und Molekülstrukturen einer einzelnen Doppelschicht sind dabei von der Anordnung benachbarter Doppelschichten abhängig. Zudem wurden Strukturmodelle mit Stapelsequenzen aufgebaut, die aus kristallographischer Sicht möglich sind, jedoch experimentell nicht beobachtet wurden, und deren Gitterenergie berechnet. Diese Stapelsequenzen liefern im Vergleich zu den energetisch günstigsten Stapelsequenzen einen signifikanten Energieverlust und treten daher selten auf. Ausgehend von den Ergebnissen der Gitterenergieminimierungen mit DFT-D-Methoden wurden Stapelwahrscheinlichkeiten mit Hilfe der Boltzmann-Statistik berechnet. Es wurde ein großes geordnetes Modell mit einer Stapelsequenz gemäß der Stapelwahrscheinlichkeiten aufgebaut. Dieses Modell wurde verwendet, um Beugungsexperimente zu simulieren und mit experimentellen Daten zu vergleichen. Die theoretischen und experimentellen Beugungsdaten waren in guter Übereinstimmung.
Die Moleküle in den Kristallstrukturen der α- und β-Phasen von DL-Methionin bilden Doppelschichten. Die beiden Phasen unterscheiden sich in der Stapelung der Doppelschichten und der Molekülkonformation. Es wurden Gitterenergieminimierungen sowohl mit Kraftfeld-Methoden als auch mit DFT-DMethoden an geordneten Modellen mit unterschiedlichen Stapelsequenzendurchgeführt. Die experimentell bestimmte Stabilitätenreihenfolge der Polymorphe von DL-Methionin bei tiefen Temperaturen wurde durch die Ergebnisse der kraftfeldbasierten Rechnungen reproduziert. Die Modellstrukturen wurden während den Rechnungen moderat verzerrt. Die Bandbreite der relativen Energien aller Modelle ist relativ gering, sodass eine Stapelfehlordnung aus thermodynamischer Sicht nicht ausgeschlossen werden kann. In der Regel liefern Gitterenergieminimierungen mit DFT-D Methoden genauere Ergebnisse. Die Modellstrukturen wurden während den Rechnungen nur leicht verzerrt. Allerdings unterscheidet sich das Energieranking zwischen den Kraftfeld- und DFT-D-Methoden deutlich. Die experimentell bestimmte Stabilitätenreihenfolge der Polymorphe von DL-Methionin wurde mit DFT-D-Methoden nicht reproduziert. Die Energieunterschiede zwischen den beiden Polymorphen (ΔE = 1,60 kJ∙mol−1 (DFT-D2) bzw. ΔE = 0,83 kJ∙mol−1 (DFT-D3)) sind relativ gering und liegen im Fehlerbereich der Methode. Die Bandbreite der relativen Energien aller Strukturmodelle beträgt nur etwa 1,8 kJ∙mol−1. Auf dieser Grundlage ist eine Stapelfehlordnung in den Kristallstrukturen von DL-Methionin möglich, jedoch nicht experimentell beobachtet. Nicht nur die Kraftfeld-,sondern auch die DFT-D-Methoden scheinen für die Berechnung der Gitterenergien für das System DL-Methionin nicht genügend genau zu sein. Die erhaltenen relativen Energien sollten daher mit Vorsicht betrachtet werden.
Chloro(phthalocyaninato)aluminium(III) (AlPcCl) bildet eine Schichtstruktur, in der sich die Moleküle zu Doppelschichten zusammenlagern. Die 1984 durchgeführte Kristallstrukturbestimmung [98] lieferte auf Grund der schlechten Datenqualität nur eine ungenaue Kristallstruktur. Die asymmetrische Einheit enthält zwei Moleküle, von denen das eine Molekül geordnet, das andere fehlgeordnet ist. Die Kristallstruktur von AlPcCl ist fehlgeordnet, weil eine einzelne Doppelschicht von Molekülen eine tetragonale P4/n-Symmetrie aufweist, die vier symmetrieäquivalente Möglichkeiten bietet, eine zweite Doppelschicht auf einer ersten Doppelschicht zu platzieren. Mit Hilfe der OD-Theorie wurde ein Satz geordneter Modelle mit verschiedenen Stapelsequenzen aufgestellt und die Gitterenergie zunächst mit Kraftfeld-Methoden und anschließend mit DFT-DMethoden berechnet. Auf Grund unzureichender Parametrisierung, musste das Kraftfeld an das System AlPcCl angepasst werden. Die Modellstrukturen werden während den Kraftfeld-Rechnungen nur leicht verzerrt. Die berechneten Gitterenergien hängen allerdings stark von der verwendeten Parametrisierung und den Atomladungen ab und sollten daher mit Vorsicht betrachtet werden. Genauere Ergebnisse erzielten Gitterenergieminimierungen mit DFT-D-Methoden. Die verschiedenen Stapelsequenzen haben eine ähnliche Energie, was die Stapelfehlordnung in der Kristallstruktur von AlPcCl erklärt. Die Überlagerung der vier energetisch günstigsten geordneten Stapelsequenzen führt zu einer gemittelten Struktur, die sehr gut die fehlgeordnete experimentelle Kristallstruktur von AlPcCl erklärt.
Bacteria are highly organized organisms which are able to adapt to and propagate under a multitude of environmental conditions. Propagation hereby requires reliable chromosome replication and segregation which has to occur cooperatively with other cellular processes such as transcription, translation or signaling. Several mechanisms were proposed for segregation of the Escherichia coli (E. coli) chromosome, for example a mitotic-like active segregation model or entropy-based passive chromosome segregation. Another segregation model suggests coupled transcription, translation and insertion of membrane proteins (termed "transertion"), which links the replicating chromosome (nucleoid) to the growing cell cylinder.
Fluorescence microscopy was widely used to provide evidence for a distinct segregation model. However, the dynamic nature of bacterial chromosomes, the small bacterial size and the optical resolution limit of ~ 200-300 nm impair unveiling the underlying mechanisms. With the emergence of super-resolution fluorescence microscopy techniques and advanced labeling methods, a new toolbox became available enabling scientists to visualize biomolecules and cellular processes in unprecedented detail. Single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) represents a set of super-resolution microscopy techniques which relies on the temporal separation of the fluorescence signal and detection of single fluorophores. Separation can be achieved using photoactivatable or -convertible fluorescent proteins (FPs) in photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM), photoswitchable organic dyes in direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (dSTORM) or dynamically binding fluorescent probes in point accumulation for imaging in nanoscale topography (PAINT). In all these techniques, the fluorescence emission pattern of single fluorophores is spatially localized with nanometer-precision. An artificial image is finally reconstructed from the coordinates of all single fluorophores detected. This provides a spatial resolution of ~ 20 nm, which is perfectly suited to investigate cellular processes in bacteria. In this thesis, different SMLM techniques were applied to study fundamental processes in E. coli. This includes determination of protein copy numbers and distributions as well as the nanoscale organization of nucleic acids and lipids.
A novel labeling approach was applied and used for super-resolution imaging of the E. coli nucleoid. It is based on the incorporation of the modified thymidine analogue 5-ethynyl-2’- deoxyuridine (EdU) into the replicating chromosome. Azide-functionalized organic fluorophores can be covalently attached to the ethynyl group of incorporated EdU bases using a copper-catalyzed "click chemistry" reaction. Under the investigated growth condition, E. coli cells exhibited overlapping replication cycles, which is commonly referred to as multi-fork replication and enables cells to divide faster than they can replicate the entire chromosome. dSTORM imaging of such labeled nucleoids revealed chromosome features with diameters of 50 - 200 nm, representing highly condensed DNA filaments. Sorting single E. coli cells by length allowed visualizing structural changes of the nucleoid throughout the cell cycle. Replicating nucleoids segregated and expanded along the bacterial long axis, while constantly covering the entire width of the cell. Measuring cell and nucleoid length revealed a relative nucleoid expansion rate of 78 ± 6 %. At the same time, nucleoids populated 63 ± 8 % of the cell length, almost exclusively being localized to the cylindrical part of the cell. This value was hence normalized to the cylindrical fraction of the cell, yielding a value of 79 ± 10 % (nucleoid-populated fraction of the cell cylinder), which is in good agreement with the observed relative nucleoid expansion rate. These results therefore support a growth-mediated segregation model, in which the chromosome is anchored to the inner membrane and passively segregated into the prospective daughter cells upon cell growth. 3-dimensional dSTORM imaging of labeled nucleoids confirmed that compacted nucleoids helically wrap along the inner membrane. Similar results were obtained by imaging orthogonally aligned E. coli cells using a holographic optical tweezer approach.
In order to visualize particular proteins together with the nucleoid, several correlative imaging workflows were established, facilitating multi-color SMLM imaging in single E. coli cells. These workflows bypass prior limitations of SMLM, including destruction of FPs by reactive oxygen species in copper-catalyzed click reactions or incompatibility of PALM imaging with dSTORM imaging buffers. A sequential SMLM imaging routine was developed which is based on postlabeling and retrieval of previously imaged cells. Optimal imaging conditions can be maintained for each fluorophore, enabling to extract quantitative information from PALM measurements while correlating the protein distribution to the nucleoid ultrastructure within the highly resolved cell envelope. Applying this workflow to an E. coli strain carrying a chromosomal rpoC - photoactivatable mCherry (PAmCh) fusion, transcribing RNA polymerase (RNAP) was found to be localized on the surface of nucleoids, where active genes are exposed towards the cytosol. During growth in nutrient-rich medium, the majority of RNAP molecules was bound to the chromosome, thus ensuring that the RNAP pool is equally distributed to the daughter cells upon cell division. This work represented the first triple-color SMLM study performed in E. coli cells. ...
The composition of cellular membranes is extremely complex and the mechanisms underlying their homeostasis are poorly understood. Organelles within a eukaryotic cell require a non-random distribution of membrane lipids and a tight regulation of the membrane lipid composition is a prerequisite for the maintenance of specific organellar functions. Physical membrane properties such as bilayer thickness, lipid packing density and surface charge are governed by the lipid composition and change gradually from the early to the late secretory pathway. As the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is situated at the beginning of the cells secretory pathway, it has to accept and accommodate a great variety and quantity of secretory and transmembrane proteins, which enter the ER on their way to their final cellular destination. Secretory proteins can be translocated into the lumen of the ER co- or posttanslationally and membrane proteins are being inserted and released into the ER membrane. In the oxidative milieu of the ER-lumen, supported by a variety of chaperones, proteins can fold into their native form.
If the folding capacity of the ER-lumen is exceeded, an accumulation of mis- or unfolded proteins in the lumen of the ER occurs, consequently triggering the unfolded protein response (UPR). This highly conserved program activates a wide-spread transcriptional response to restore protein folding homeostasis. In fact, 7 – 8% of all genes in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae (S. cerevisiae) are regulated by the UPR. The mechanism underlying the activation of the UPR by protein folding stress has been investigated thoroughly in the last decades and many of its mechanistic details have been elucidated. Recently, it became evident that aberrant lipid compositions of the ER membrane, collectively referred to as lipid bilayer stress, are equally potent in activating the UPR. The underlying molecular mechanism of this membrane-activated UPR, however, remained unclear.
This study focuses on the UPR in S. cerevisiae and characterizes the inositol requiring enzyme 1 (Ire1) as the sole UPR sensor in S. cerevisiae. Active Ire1 forms oligomers and, collaboratively with the tRNA ligase Rlg1, splices immature mRNA of the transcription factor HAC1, which results in the synthesis of mature HAC1 mRNA and the production of the active Hac1 protein, which binds to UPR-elements in the nucleus and activates the expression of UPR target genes. Here, the combination of in vivo and in vitro experiments is being used, which is supplemented by molecular dynamics (MD) simulations performed by Roberto Covino and Gerhard Hummer (MPI for Biophysics, Frankfurt), aiming to identify the molecular mechanism of Ire1 activation by lipid bilayer stress. This study focuses on the analysis of the juxta- and transmembrane region of Ire1. Bioinformatic analyses revealed a putative ER-lumenal amphipathic helix (AH) N-terminally of and partially overlapping with the transmembrane helix (TMH). This predicted AH contains a large hydrophobic face, which inserts into the ER membrane, forcing the TMH into a tilted orientation within the membrane. The resulting unusual architecture of Ire1’s AH and TMH constitutes a unique structural element required for the activation of Ire1 by lipid bilayer stress.
To investigate the function of the AH in the physiological context, different variants of Ire1 were produced under the control of their endogenous promoter and from their endogenous locus. The functional role of the AH was tested, by disrupting its amphipathic character by the introduction of charged residues into the hydrophobic face of the AH. The role of a conserved negative residue between the TMH and the AH (E540 in S. cerevisiae) was tested by substituting it by a unipolar, polar, or positively charged residue. These variants were intensively characterized using a series of assays:
This thesis provides evidence that the AH is crucial for the function of Ire1: Mutant variants with a disrupted (F531R, V535R) or otherwise modified AH (E540A) exhibited a lower degree of oligomerization and failed to catalyze the splicing of the HAC1 mRNA as the Wildtype control. Likewise, the induction of PDI1, a target gene of the UPR, was greatly reduced in mutants with a disrupted or defective AH. These data revealed an important functional role of the AH for normal Ire1 function.
An in vitro system was established to analyze the membrane-mediated oligomerization of Ire1. This system enabled the isolated functional analysis of the AH and TMH during Ire1 activation by lipid bilayer stress. A fusion construct, coding for the maltose binding protein (MBP) from Escherichia coli (E. coli), N-terminally to the AH and TMH of Ire1 was produced. The heterologous production in E. coli, the purification and reconstitution of this minimal sensor of Ire1 in liposomes was established as part of this study. To analyze the oligomeric status of the minimal sensor in different lipid environments, continuous wave electron paramagnetic resonance (cwEPR) spectroscopic experiments were performed. These experiments revealed that the molecular packing density of the lipids had a significant influence of the oligomerization of the spin-labeled membrane sensor: increasing packing densities resulted in sensor oligomerization. The AH-disruptive F531R mutant, in which the amphipathic character of the AH was destroyed, showed no membrane-sensitive changes in its oligomerization status.
Thus, the activation of Ire1 by lipid bilayer stress is achieved by a membrane-based mechanism. According to the current model, the AH induces a local membrane compression by inserting its large hydrophobic face into the membrane. As membrane thickness and acyl chain order are interconnected, this compression simultaneously results in an increased local disordering of lipid acyl chains. Supporting MD simulations performed by Roberto Covino and Gerhard Hummer revealed that the bilayer compression is significantly more pronounced in a densely packed lipid environment, than in a lipid environment of lower lipid packing density. Hence, the energetic cost of the local compression increases with the packing density of the membrane, but is compensated for by the oligomerization of Ire1. This minimization of energetic cost induced by the membrane deformation of Ire1 forms the basis for the activation of Ire1 by lipid bilayer stress.
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.