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The mfl-riboswitch regulates expression of ribonucleotide reductase subunit in Mesoplasma florum by binding to 2´-deoxyguanosine and thereby promoting transcription termination. We characterized the structure of the ligand-bound aptamer domain by NMR spectroscopy and compared the mfl-aptamer to the aptamer domain of the closely related purine-sensing riboswitches. We show that the mfl-aptamer accommodates the extra 2´-deoxyribose unit of the ligand by forming a more relaxed binding pocket than these found in the purine-sensing riboswitches. Tertiary structures of the xpt-aptamer bound to guanine and of the mfl-aptamer bound to 2´-deoxyguanosine exhibit very similar features, although the sequence of the mfl-aptamer contains several alterations compared to the purine-aptamer consensus sequence. These alterations include the truncation of a hairpin loop which is crucial for complex formation in all purine-sensing riboswitches characterized to date. We further defined structural features and ligand binding requirements of the free mfl-aptamer and found that the presence of Mg2+ is not essential for complex formation, but facilitates ligand binding by promoting pre-organization of key structural motifs in the free aptamer.
Der 2‘-Desoxyguanosin-Riboschalter gehört zur unter Bakterien weit verbreiteten Klasse der Purin-Riboschalter. Allerdings wurden 2‘-Desoxyguanosin-bindende Riboschalter bisher ausschließlich in M. florum gefunden, damit stellt diese RNA eine Ausnahme unter den ansonsten verbreiteten Purin-Riboschaltern dar. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde ein NMR-Strukturmodell des IA-Aptamer-2‘-Desoxyguanosinkomplexes erstellt und anhand der mittels NMRSpektroskopie zugänglichen strukturellen Informationen sowohl Struktur und Dynamik des freien RNA-Aptamers als auch des 2‘-Desoxyguanosinkomplexes charakterisiert. Dabei wurde insbesondere der Einfluss von Mg2+ auf Struktur und Dynamik der jeweiligen Zustände sowie auf den durch 2‘-Desoxyguanosin induzierten Faltungsprozess untersucht.
Mg2+-Ionen modulieren die Faltungstrajektorien von sensorischen RNA-Domänen. Die Übertragbarkeit von Mg2+-abhängigen Charakteristika der RNA-Faltung innerhalb verschiedener Messmethoden ist durch die schlechte Vergleichbarkeit der relativen Konzentrationsverhältnisse eingeschränkt. Die NMR-spektroskopisch beobachtbaren Mg2+-Einflüsse sollten also unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der für NMR benötigten vergleichsweise sehr hohen RNAKonzentrationen mit Ergebnissen aus kalorimetrischen oder fluoreszenzspektroskopischen Messungen interpretiert werden. Die in der NMR-Spektroskopie üblichen hohen Probenkonzentrationen befinden sich in dem Regime, in dem auch der physikalische Effekt des verdrängten Volumens eine Rolle zu spielen beginnt. Demnach ist es für die RNA-Moleküle im NMR-Probenröhrchen bei Konzentrationen von 5-10 mg/ml auch ohne Zugabe von Mg2+ entropisch günstiger, kompakte Konformationen einzunehmen. Die Relevanz des Effekts des verdrängten Volumens für die RNA-Faltung unter NMR-Bedingungen und unter zellulären Bedingungen ist Gegenstand der aktuellen Forschung und wird in dieser Arbeit am Beispiel des IA-Aptamers diskutiert.
Der oft einzigartige Bindungsmodus ubiquitärer Metaboliten durch bakterielle Riboschalter (Montange and Batey, 2006) ermöglicht prinzipiell den Einsatz von RNA-Aptameren in vivo, ohne mit zellulären Proteinsystemen zu interferieren (Mulhbacher et al., 2010). Therapeutische Ziele sind beispielsweise die Anwendung von Riboschaltern gegen bakterielle Pathogene beziehungsweise gegen pathogene Bakterien selbst. Eine weitere Rolle wird RiboschalterElementen zukünftig als Bausteine in der synthetischen Biologie zukommen (Dixon et al., 2010; Knight, 2003; Topp and Gallivan, 2008). Hierfür ist es von grundlegender Bedeutung, Charakterisierung von Struktur als Basis für das Verständnis von Funktion unter zellulären Bedingungen zu etablieren. Im Rahmen einer Zusammenarbeit mit Robert Hänsel aus dem Arbeitskreis von Prof. Dr. Volker Doetsch wurde am Beispiel des IA-Aptamers und einer nichtnatürlichen Sequenzvariante gezeigt, dass eine strukturelle Charakterisierung von Riboschaltern mittels in cell NMR-Spektroskopie möglich ist. In Zusammenarbeit mit Karl von Laer aus der Arbeitsgruppe von Prof. Dr. Beatrix Suess wurden beide RNA-Aptamer hinsichtlich ihrer Funktion in einem biologischen Assay getestet. Die Ergebnisse dieser Experimente zeigten eine deutliche Korrelation von Struktur und Funktion in vivo, während Diskrepanzen zwischen Struktur in vitro und Funktion in vivo demonstriert werden.
Weiterhin wurde im Rahmen dieser Arbeit gezeigt, dass eine gewisse strukturelle Flexibilität der Bindungstaschen regulatorischer RNA-Motive für Selektion und Adaption während Evolution nötig ist. Beispielsweise wurde für den Guanin-Riboschalter gezeigt, dass der nicht-native Ligand 2‘-Desoxyguanosin zur Komplexbildung des Aptamers führt. Demnach könnte die Bindung von 2‘-Desoxyguanosin im Guanin-Riboschalter bereits evolutionär angelegt sein und die Entstehung des IA-Aptamers nach Genomreduktion der Mesoplasmen begünstigt haben. Das IA-Aptamer dagegen bindet Guanin nicht, stattdessen besitzt M. florum auf Guanin spezialisierte Sequenzvarianten dieses Riboschalters (Kim et al., 2007). Strukturell hochauflösende Einblicke in unterschiedliche Zustände der Bindungstasche im G-Aptamer-Thioguaninkomplex, die durch die Lösung der Kristallstruktur des GLoop-Aptamers ermöglicht wurden, unterstützen die Hypothese einer anpassungsfähigen Bindungstasche im G-Aptamer. Für B. subtilis wäre es interessant, die physiologische Bedeutung der Komplexbildung des G-Aptamers mit 2‘-Desoxyguanosin zu untersuchen.
Es wurden mehrere unkonjugierte 2.4-Diaminopteridine erstmals synthetisiert. Die Wachstumshemmung verschiedener Mikroorganismen durch 2.4-Diamino-6-[1.2-dihydroxypropyl-(ʟ-erythro)] pteridin (Aminobiopterin) und anderer unkonjugierter 2.4-Diamino-pteridine läßt sich nur mit Folsäure oder Thymin, nicht dagegen mit Biopterin aufheben.
A study on the effect of UV-irradiated polyuridylic acid on the incorporation of phenylalanine into the polypeptide precipitable through trichloroacetic acid, in a cell-free system from E. coli was made. Attempts were made to reactivate the UV-inactivated polyuridylic acid through hydrogen peroxide, uranyl acetate and visible light. We could show that polyuridylic acid irradiated at a dose of 1.2 ×105 ergs/mm2 could be completely reactivated, while the one irradiated at a higher dose of 2.4 ×105 ergs/mm2 could not be completely reactivated under the conditions of our experiment. We have studied the effects of hydrogen peroxide and uranyl acetate on UV-irradiated polyuridylic acid chemically as well. Our results altogether show that the photoreactivating effect of uranyl acetate and hydrogen peroxide is due to their ability to split the uracil dimers formed during UV-irradiation.
The non-specific inhibition of the poly U directed polymerisation of phenylalanine through polyanions was studied. This inhibition was found to be in order as follows: dextransulfate, polyethylensulfate, heparine, ribosomal RNA and alginate. It was found that poly A, poly AP and poly AG cause a specific inhibition of the poly U directed synthesis of polyphenylalanine. Poly AG and poly AP, but not poly A were found to inhibit the poly C directed polymerisation of proline as well. The mechanism of these two types of inhibition caused by polyanions has been discussed.
Steroid initiated enzyme induction (Δ5-Ketosteroid-Isomerase, 3α-Hydroxysteroid-Dehydrogenase, and 3β.17β-Hydroxysteroid-Dehydrogenase) in Pseudomonas testosteroni was investigated with respect to the kinetics of induction, operon control of the induced enzymes, and the relative strengths of various inducers. The induction process was followed indirectly by selective inhibition of different stages in the protein synthetic pathway. Comparisons between bacterial and mammalian steroid induction are discussed.
Bei jeder chemischen Reaktion werden Bindungen gebrochen und andere neu geknüpft. Dabei ändert sich die Anordnung und eventuell Anzahl der Atome im Molekül. Voraussetzung hierfür sind Bewegungen der beteiligten Atome und Moleküle. Um chemische Umwandlungen in "Echtzeit" zu studieren, müssen Untersuchungen im Zeitbereich der Schwingungs- und Rotationsdynamik durchgeführt werden. Dazu nutzen Wissenschaftler des Instituts für Physikalische und Theoretische Chemie die Möglichkeiten der modernen Ultrakurzzeit-Lasertechnik.
Photoinduced electron transfer from organic dye molecules to semiconductor nanoparticles is the first and most important reaction step for the mechanism in the so called “wet solar cells” [1]. The time scale between the photoexcitation of the dye and the electron injection into the conduction band of the
semiconductor colloid varies from a few tens of femtoseconds to nanoseconds, depending on the specific electron transfer parameters of the system, e.g., electronic coupling or free energy values of donor and acceptor molecules [2–10]. We show that visible pump/ white light probe is a very efficient tool to investigate the electron injection reaction allowing to observe simultaneously the relaxation of the excited dye, the injection process of the electron, the cooling of the injected electron and the charge recombination reaction.
Pflanzen, aber auch einige Bakterien und Archäen verfügen über hocheffiziente Mechanismen, Licht in Energie umzuwandeln. Photovoltaik-Zellen reichen an die Perfektion dieser natürlichen Systeme noch lange nicht heran. Deshalb versuchen Forscher, mit ultraschnellen spektroskopischen Methoden der Natur in die Karten zu schauen und von ihr zu lernen.
A single model system for integrative studies on multiple facets of antigen presentation is lacking. PAKC is a novel panel of ten cell lines knocked out for individual components of the HLA class I antigen presentation pathway. PAKC will accelerate HLA-I research in the fields of oncology, infectiology, and autoimmunity.
With the emergence of immunotherapies, the understanding of functional HLA class I antigen presentation to T cells is more relevant than ever. Current knowledge on antigen presentation is based on decades of research in a wide variety of cell types with varying antigen presentation machinery (APM) expression patterns, proteomes and HLA haplotypes. This diversity complicates the establishment of individual APM contributions to antigen generation, selection and presentation. Therefore, we generated a novel Panel of APM Knockout Cell lines (PAKC) from the same genetic origin. After CRISPR/Cas9 genome-editing of ten individual APM components in a human cell line, we derived clonal cell lines and confirmed their knockout status and phenotype. We then show how PAKC will accelerate research on the functional interplay between APM components and their role in antigen generation and presentation. This will lead to improved understanding of peptide-specific T cell responses in infection, cancer and autoimmunity.
The unimolecular thermal decomposition of chloroethane-2-d3 and chloroethane-2-d1 was studied in a static system at two temperatures and at pressures between 0.1 and 10 mm Hg. The rate constants for the high pressure limit were obtained from these measurements and used to calculate the Arrhenius equations. The decomposition of chloroethane-2-d3 was also studied at high conversions and yielded almost exclusively (97%) DCl and CD2CH2 as shown by mass spectrometric analysis thus proving a molecular elimination mechanism via a four-centered reaction complex.
We compiled an NMR data set consisting of exact nuclear Overhauser enhancement (eNOE) distance limits, residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) and scalar (J) couplings for GB3, which forms one of the largest and most diverse data set for structural characterization of a protein to date. All data have small experimental errors, which are carefully estimated. We use the data in the research article Vogeli et al., 2015, Complementarity and congruence between exact NOEs and traditional NMR probes for spatial decoding of protein dynamics, J. Struct. Biol., 191, 3, 306–317, doi:10.1016/j.jsb.2015.07.008 [1] for cross-validation in multiple-state structural ensemble calculation. We advocate this set to be an ideal test case for molecular dynamics simulations and structure calculations.
The archaeal ATP synthase is a multisubunit complex that consists of a catalytic A(1) part and a transmembrane, ion translocation domain A(0). The A(1)A(0) complex from the hyperthermophile Pyrococcus furiosus was isolated. Mass analysis of the complex by laser-induced liquid bead ion desorption (LILBID) indicated a size of 730 +/- 10 kDa. A three-dimensional map was generated by electron microscopy from negatively stained images. The map at a resolution of 2.3 nm shows the A(1) and A(0) domain, connected by a central stalk and two peripheral stalks, one of which is connected to A(0), and both connected to A(1) via prominent knobs. X-ray structures of subunits from related proteins were fitted to the map. On the basis of the fitting and the LILBID analysis, a structural model is presented with the stoichiometry A(3)B(3)CDE(2)FH(2)ac(10).
CD44v6, a member of the CD44 family of transmembrane glycoproteins is a co-receptor for two receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), Met and VEGFR-2 (vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2). CD44v6 is not only required for the activation of these RTKs but also for signalling. In order to understand the role of CD44v6 in Met and VEGFR-2 activation and signalling we tested whether CD44v6 binds to their ligands, HGF (hepatocyte growth factor) and VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor), respectively. FACS analysis and cellular ELISA showed binding of HGF and VEGF only to cells expressing CD44v6. Direct binding of CD44v6 to HGF and VEGF was demonstrated in pull-down assays and the binding affinities were determined using MicroScale Thermophoresis, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and fluorescence anisotropy. The binding affinity of CD44v6 to HGF is in the micromolar range in contrast with the high-affinity binding measured in the case of VEGF and CD44v6, which is in the nanomolar range. These data reveal a heparan sulfate-independent direct binding of CD44v6 to the ligands of Met and VEGFR-2 and suggest different roles of CD44v6 for these RTKs.
[Nachruf] Walter Wetzel
(2010)
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden Sekundärmetabolite aus marinen Wirbellosen der Nordsee, arktischen und antarktischen Gewässern untersucht. Ausgehend von Untersuchungen zur marinen chemischen Ökologie von Haliclona viscosa und physiologischen Effekten auf die Kieme der Krabbe Carcinus maenas wurden verschiedene Alkaloide und Cholesterole isoliert (siehe Abbildung 25). Vier unbekannte Alkaloide konnten erstmalig aus Haliclona viscosa isoliert werden. Sie leiten sich von 3-Alkylpyridin-Alkaloiden ab, die für Schwämme der Gattung Haliclona charakteristisch sind. Die Strukturaufklärung erfolgte durch den Einsatz von NMRSpektroskopie und Massenspektrometrie. Die symmetrischen bzw. pseudo-symmetrischen Eigenschaften erschwerten im besonderen Maße die Strukturaufklärung. Die Isolation von Haliclamin C und D sowie Viscosalin ermöglichte es, daß für sie ökologische Funktionen nachgewiesen werden konnten [33, 34], die dem Schwamm Haliclona viscosa in seinem Habitat Vorteile im Kampf um das Überleben bringen. Viscosamin ist das erste natürlich vorkommende zyklische Trimer eines 3-Alkylpyridin-Alkaloids, daß aus einer marinen Umgebung stammt. Es schließt eine Lücke zwischen monomeren, dimeren und polymeren 3-Alkylpyridin-Alkaloiden. Aus dem bisher noch nicht chemisch untersuchten Borstenwurm Laetmonice producta, konnte Homarin isoliert werden [81-84]. Homarin zeigte einen bisher unbekannten physiologischen Effekt auf die Kieme eines potentiellen Räubers [35]. Ob Homarin aufgrund seiner physiologischen Wirkung den Borstenwurm vor z.B. räuberischen Krebstieren schützen kann, muß noch mit weiteren Versuchen geklärt werden. Enthält 3 Art. aus versch. Zeitschr.: 1 Christian A. Volk and Matthias Köck: Viscosamine: The First Naturally Occuring Trimeric 3-Alkyl Pyridinium Alkaloid ; 2 Christian A. Volk, Heike Lippert, Ellen Lichte, and Matthias Köck: Two New Haliclamines from the Arctic Sponge Haliclona viscosa, European Journal of Organic Chemistry 2004, im Druck ; 3 Christian A. Volk and Matthias Köck: Viscosaline: New 3-Alkyl Pyridinium Alkaloid from the Artic Sponge Haliclona viscosa, Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2004, im Druck
So far clinical human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) therapy is limited to non-curative treatments. However, as recently shown, alternative approaches such as HIV gene therapy have the potential to functionally cure the disease (e.g. the hematopoietic stem cell (HSC)-transplantation with a CCR5Δ32 homozygous transplant) (1). In contrast to the highly personalized medical treatment applied in the ‘Berlin case’, more broadly applicable approaches are currently under intensive investigation.
One example is the adeno-associated-virus (AAV)-mediated delivery of in vivo secreted antiviral entry inhibitors (iSAVE), the concept of which is based on the direct in vivo administration of a broadly applicable highly potent antiviral gene (here: a C46-derived entry inhibitory peptide interfering with HIV-1 membrane fusion). The AAV-based gene delivery is believed to overcome several limitations of gene therapeutic treatments based on ex vivo lentiviral trials in the past. It is (i) targeting differentiated HIV target cells (i.e. liver and differentiated lymphatic cells) reducing the risk of genotoxicity compared to stem cell-based trials, (ii) overcoming the limitation of a low number of genetically modifiable cells as in lentivirally based ex vivo transduction strategies (i.e. limited modifiable cell number due to culture conditions and lower vector titers) and (iii) using the safe AAV vector system, which has not been associated with major genotoxicity in men. (iv) Most importantly, the concept of secretable entry inhibitors does not require transduction of large amounts of cells due to the protective bystander effect. Thus, iSAVE might be a treatment principle for HIV infection that might be able to cure patients irrespective of their viral isolates or adherence.
Accordingly, the iSAVE concept could aim at two different sites in the patient for the production of antiviral transgenes, either the systemic production via suitable producer cells (e.g. hepatocytes) or the local production in the lymphatic system.
In a first approach, we are able to efficiently target hepatocytes using the natural AAV serotype 8 to express high plasma levels of secretable antiviral entry inhibitors in order to systemically suppress viral replication. In this setting we could show that iSAVE peptides are highly expressed in hepatocytes. However, plasma levels of iSAVE were insufficient when using a secretable peptide as sole antiviral transgene.
As a second treatment strategy, the iSAVE project aimed to deliver antiviral genes directly to the site of viral replication, the lymphatic system. Here, (i) a panel of naturally occurring AAV serotypes as well as (ii) AAV retargeting approaches were employed to design a highly efficient and selective AAV vector variant for gene delivery into the lymphatic system after intravenous vector administration.
In detail, (i) screening of the natural occurring serotypes revealed that the AAV serotype 1 (AAV-1) was best in targeting splenic tissue in two humanized mouse models, however at a very low level. After systemic AAV-1 vector administration neither transduction of human lymphocytes did occur nor was iSAVE expressed in the lymphatic system in a humanized mouse model.
(ii) In a second approach, we modified the well-characterized AAV-2 serotype in a tropism-defining region of its capsid gene by insertion of human peripheral blood lymphocytes (hPBL)-tropic peptide ligands. These in turn were selected by M13 in vivo phage display and by in vivo AAV peptide display. Selected variants were cloned and tested for hPBL transduction in vitro. Although the selected variants did not show increased expression efficacies compared to AAV-2 WT, it still might be possible that the selected variant are more specific for hPBLs as these conditions have not been tested.
As these selection processes required a humanized mouse model that comprises a functional lymphatic system, we established the previously described Trimera mouse model in our lab (2). We found that this mouse model could be further improved to allow engraftment of a lower number of gene-modified (gm) human T cells as in the classical Trimera model. These modified Trimera mice (mT3 mice) were conditioned by inclusion of cyclophosphamide (CTX) to the irradiation-conditioning scheme of the classical Trimera model.
Comparison of mT3 mice with established NSG and DKO mice in an adoptive gm T cell transplantation setting revealed that NSG mice were the most robust model providing high reproducibility in human T cell engraftment. MT3 mice allowed a substantial, yet more variable engraftment of gm T cells. Besides comparing engraftment kinetics, the graft quality (i.e. clonality and cytokine milieu) was analyzed. Again, NSG mice showed the most balanced homeostatic repopulation three weeks after transplantation, while mT3 mice were prone to Th1-type, oligloclonal repopulation, indicating an early onset of xenograft-versus-host disease. Finally, the lymphatic infiltration was analyzed. As expected, mT3 mice provided the most intact lymphatic structures, although the normal lymphatic morphology was not restored.
In conclusion, it was demonstrated in this work that AAV-mediated iSAVE gene therapy faces specific limitations depending on the respective targeting approach
In the systemic approach, iSAVE peptides have to be further optimized in terms of transgene design itself, as high-level accumulation in murine plasma was not feasible for the short iSAVE precursor. In the local, lymphatic targeting approach, AAV-mediated expression faces its limits in targeting specificity but foremost expression efficacy. Thus, the AAV vector itself needs further optimization for sufficient local iSAVE expression levels. Independently from the AAV-related approaches, a novel humanized mouse model was established in this work. Despite drawbacks regarding repopulation variability and set-up complexity, the novel mT3 mouse model comprised improved secondary lymphatic structures for adoptive T cell transfer, which might be an interesting platform for studies in lymphoma or leukemia therapy.
According to general doctrine canceroselectivity of Cyclophosphamide is based on different activities of the 4-hydroxycyclophosphamide (OHCP) detoxifying cellular enzyme aldehyde dehydrogenase in tumor and normal cells. Aldehyde dehydrogenase converts the OHCP tautomere aldophosphamide (ALDO) to the non-cytotoxic carboxyphosphamide. Due to different activities of the detoxifying enzyme more cytotoxic phosporamide mustard (PAM) is spontaneously released from OHCP/ALDO in tumor cells. PAM unfolds its cytotoxic activity by forming intrastrand and interstrand DNA crosslinks. This hypothesis is supported by in vitro experiments which show inverse correlations of aldehyde dehydrogenase activity and sensitivity of tumor cells against activated congeners of cyclophosphamide like mafosfamide which hydrolyses within a few minutes to OHCP. In protein free rat serum ultrafiltrate however free OHCP and its coexisting tautomer ALDO are stable compounds. Its half-life in protein free rat serum ultrafiltrate (pH7, 37oC) is more than 20 h. Contrary to protein free ultrafiltrate in whole serum ALDO is enzymatically decomposed to PAM and 3-hydroxypropionaldehyde (HPA) within minutes. The decomposing enzyme was identified as 3´-5´ phosphodiesterase, the Michaelis constant was determined to be 10-3 M in human serum.
The experiments presented clearly demonstrate that ALDO is not only cleaved base catalyzed yielding acrolein and PAM but also cleaved enzymatically by serum phosphodiesterases yielding HPA and PAM. It is discussed that the reason of the high canceroselectivity of cyclophosphamide is not only due to enrichment of OHCP/ALDO in tumor cells due to less detoxification of ALDO in tumor cells than in normal cells. It is discussed that there is a good reason for an additional mechanism namely the amplification of apoptosis of PAM damaged cells by HPA.
A two step mechanism for the mechanism of action of OHCP/ALDO is discussed. During the first step, the DNA is damaged by alkylation by PAM. During the second step the cell containing damaged DNA is eliminated by apoptosis, supported by HPA.
The centrosome linker proteins C-Nap1, rootletin, and CEP68 connect the two centrosomes of a cell during interphase into one microtubule-organizing center. This coupling is important for cell migration, cilia formation, and timing of mitotic spindle formation. Very little is known about the structure of the centrosome linker. Here, we used stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy to show that each C-Nap1 ring at the proximal end of the two centrioles organizes a rootletin ring and, in addition, multiple rootletin/CEP68 fibers. Rootletin/CEP68 fibers originating from the two centrosomes form a web-like, interdigitating network, explaining the flexible nature of the centrosome linker. The rootletin/CEP68 filaments are repetitive and highly ordered. Staggered rootletin molecules (N-to-N and C-to-C) within the filaments are 75 nm apart. Rootletin binds CEP68 via its C-terminal spectrin repeat-containing region in 75-nm intervals. The N-to-C distance of two rootletin molecules is ∼35 to 40 nm, leading to an estimated minimal rootletin length of ∼110 nm. CEP68 is important in forming rootletin filaments that branch off centrioles and to modulate the thickness of rootletin fibers. Thus, the centrosome linker consists of a vast network of repeating rootletin units with C-Nap1 as ring organizer and CEP68 as filament modulator.
The supersilylated ethene trans-(tBu3Si)HC=CH(SitBu3) (triclinic, P ī) is accessible from the reaction of tBu3SiCHBr2 with nBuLi at −78 °C in THF or Et2 O. The reaction of Li(H2NCH2CH2NH2)C≡CH with tBu3SiBr leads to the formation of (tBu3Si)C≡CH and (tBu3Si)C≡C(SitBu3). X-Ray quality crystals of (tBu3Si)C≡C(SitBu3) (triclinic, P ī) were obtained by recrystallization from hexane. In contrast to the structures of the disilane tBu3Si-SitBu3 and the disiloxane tBu3Si-O-SitBu3, the sterically crowded ethene trans-(tBu3Si)HC=CH(SitBu3) and ethyne (tBu3Si)C≡C(SitBu3) feature dihedral angles of 60° in the solid-state structures.
The Mg centre in the title compound, [MgBr2(C2H7N)3], is pentacoordinated in a trigonal-bipyramidal mode with the two Br atoms in axial positions and the N atoms of the dimethylamine ligands in equatorial positions. The MgII centre is located on a crystallographic twofold rotation axis. The crystal structure is stabilized by N—H⋯Br hydrogen bonds. The N atom and H atoms of one dimethylamine ligand are disordered over two equally occupied positions.
The title compound, [Li3(C4F9O)3(C3H6O)3], features an open Li/O cube with an Li ion missing at one corner. Three of the four bridging O atoms of the cube carry a fluorinated tert-butyl residue, whereas the fourth is part of an acetone molecule. Two of the Li atoms are further bonded to a non-bridging acetone molecule. Two of the lithium ion coordination geometries are very distorted LiO4 tetrahedra; the third could be described as a very distorted LiO3 T-shape with two distant F-atom neighbours. The Li[cdots, three dots, centered]Li contact distances for the three-coordinate Li+ ion [2.608 (14) and 2.631 (12) Å] are much shorter that the contact distance [2.940 (13) Å] between the tetrahedrally coordinated species.
The crystal structure of the title compound, Na[(C6F5)BH3], is composed of discrete anions and cations. The sodium cations are surrounded by four anions with three short Na...B [2.848 (8), 2.842 (7) and 2.868 (8) Å] and two short Na...F contacts [2.348 (5) and 2.392 (5) Å], forming a three-dimensional network. The anion is the first structural example of a pentafluorophenyl ring carrying a BH3 group.
The crystal structure of the title compound, hexa-μ2-bromido-μ4-oxido-tetrakis[(diethyl ether)magnesium], [Mg4Br6O(C4H10O)4], determined from data measured at 173 K, differs from the previously known structure of diethyl ether magnesium oxybromide, which was determined from room-temperature data [Stucky & Rundle (1964 [triangle]). J. Am. Chem. Soc. 86, 4821–4825]. The title compound crystallizes in the tetragonal space group I An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc. Object name is e-67-m1614-efi7.jpg, whereas the previously known structure crystallizes in a different tetragonal space group, namely P An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc. Object name is e-67-m1614-efi7.jpg21 c. Both molecules have crystallographic An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc. Object name is e-67-m1614-efi7.jpg symmetry and show almost identical geometric parameters for the Mg, Br and O atoms. The crystal of the title compound turned out to be a merohedral twin emulating a structure with apparent Laue symmetry 4/mmm, whereas the correct Laue group is just 4/m. The fractional contribution of the minor twin component converged to 0.462 (1).
Diese Arbeit teilt sich in zwei Themenblöcke, deren zentrales Element Borat-Anionen darstellen, die unterschiedlichste Funktionen erfüllen. Durch entsprechende Wahl der Substituenten am Bor können sowohl Anionen mit schwach koordinierenden Eigenschaften erzeugt werden, als auch Borate, die sich zum Einsatz als Ligand in der Koordinationschemie eignen. ...
Some anaerobic bacteria use biotin-dependent Na+-translocating decarboxylases (Bdc) of β-keto acids or their thioester analogs as key enzymes in their energy metabolism. Glutaconyl-CoA decarboxylase (Gcd), a member of this protein family, drives the endergonic translocation of Na+ across the membrane with the exergonic decarboxylation of glutaconyl-CoA (ΔG0’ ≈−30 kJ/mol) to crotonyl-CoA. Here, we report on the molecular characterization of Gcd from Clostridium symbiosum based on native PAGE, size exclusion chromatography (SEC) and laser-induced liquid bead ion desorption mass spectrometry (LILBID-MS). The obtained molecular mass of ca. 400 kDa fits to the DNA sequence-derived mass of 379 kDa with a subunit composition of 4 GcdA (65 kDa), 2 GcdB (35 kDa), GcdC1 (15 kDa), GcdC2 (14 kDa), and 2 GcdD (10 kDa). Low-resolution structural information was achieved from preliminary electron microscopic (EM) measurements, which resulted in a 3D reconstruction model based on negative-stained particles. The Gcd structure is built up of a membrane-spanning base primarily composed of the GcdB dimer and a solvent-exposed head with the GcdA tetramer as major component. Both globular parts are bridged by a linker presumably built up of segments of GcdC1, GcdC2 and the 2 GcdDs. The structure of the highly mobile Gcd complex represents a template for the global architecture of the Bdc family.
The carnitine transporter CaiT from Escherichia coli belongs to the betaine, choline, and carnitine transporter family of secondary transporters. It acts as an L-carnitine/gamma-butyrobetaine exchanger and is predicted to span the membrane 12 times. Unlike the other members of this transporter family, it does not require an ion gradient and does not respond to osmotic stress (Jung, H., Buchholz, M., Clausen, J., Nietschke, M., Revermann, A., Schmid, R., and Jung, K. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 39251-39258). The structure and oligomeric state of the protein was examined in detergent and in lipid bilayers. Blue native gel electrophoresis indicated that CaiT was a trimer in detergent solution. This result was further supported by gel filtration and cross-linking studies. Electron microscopy and single particle analysis of the protein showed a triangular structure of three masses or two parallel elongated densities. Reconstitution of CaiT into lipid bilayers yielded two-dimensional crystals that indicated that CaiT was a trimer in the membrane, similar to its homologue BetP. The implications of the trimeric structure on the function of CaiT are discussed.
My graduate thesis is on the "Structural studies of membrane transport proteins". Transporters are membrane proteins that have multiple membrane-spanning a-helices. They are dynamic and diverse proteins, undergoing a large conformational change and transporting wide range of susbtrates. Based on their energy source they can be classified into primary and secondary transport systems. Primary transport systems are driven by the use of chemical (ATP) or light energy, while secondary transporters utilize ion gradients to transport substrates. I began my PhD dissertation on secondary transporters by two-dimensional crystallization and electron crystallographic analysis and recently my focus also has shifted towards 3D crystallization. The following projects constitute my PhD thesis: 1) 2D crystallization of MjNhaP1 and pH induced structural change: MjNhaP1, a Na+/H+ antiporter that is regulated by pH has been implicated in homeostasis of H+ and Na+ in Methanococcus jannaschii, a hyperthermophilic archaeon that grows optimally at 85°C. MjNhaP1 was cloned and expressed in E. coli. Two-dimensional crystals were obtained from purified protein at pH4. Electron cryo-microscopy yielded an 8Å projection map. The map of MjNhaP1 shows elongated densities in the centre of the dimer and a cluster of density peaks on either side of the dimer core, indicative of a bundle of 4-6 membrane-spanning helices. The effect of pH on the structure of MjNhaP1was studied in situ in 2D crystals revealing a major change in density within the helix bundle relative to the dimer interface. This change occurred at pH6 and above. The two conformations at low and high pH most likely represent the closed and open states of the antiporter, respectively. This is the first instance where a conformational change associated with the regulation of a secondary transporter appears to map structurally. Reconstruction of 3D map and high-resolution structure by x-ray crystallography would be necessary to understand the mechanism of ion transport and regulation by pH. 2) 2D crystallization of Proline transporter: Proline transporter (PutP) from E.coli belongs the sodium-solute symporter family that includes disease related sodium dependent glucose and iodide transporter in humans. Sodium and proline are co-transported with a stoichiometry of 1:1. Purified PutP was reconstituted to yield 2D crystals that were hexagonal in nature. The 2D crystals had tendency to stack indicating their willingness to form 3D crystals. A projection map of PutP from negatively stained crystals showed trimeric arrangement of protein. Other members of the SSF family have been shown to be monomers. My analysis of oligomeric state of PutP in detergent by blue native gel indicates a monomer in detergent solution. It is likely that PutP can function as a monomer but at higher concentration and in lipid bilayer it tends to form trimer. 3) Oligomeric state and crystallization of carnitine transporter from E.coli: E.coli carnitine transporter (CaiT) belongs to the BCCT (Betaine, Carnitine and Choline) superfamily that transports molecules with quaternary amine groups. CaiT is predicted to span the membrane 12 times and acts as a L-carnitine/g-butyrobetaine exchanger. Unlike other members in this transporter family, it does not require an ion gradient and does not respond to osmotic stress. Over-expression of the protein yielded ~2mg of protein/L of culture. The structure and oligomeric state of the protein were analyzed in detergent and lipid bilayers. Blue native gel electrophoresis indicated that CaiT was a trimer in detergent solution. Gel filtration and cross-linking studies further support this. Reconstitution of CaiT into lipid bilayers resulted in 2D crystals. Analysis of negatively stained 2D crystals confirmed that CaiT is a trimer in the membrane. Initial 3D crystallization trials have been successful and currently, the crystals diffract to 6Å and are being improved. 4) Monomeric porin OmpG: OmpG is a bacterial outer membrane b-barrel protein. It is monomeric and its size (33kDa) places it as a prime candidate for a structural solution, using the recently developed method of solid state NMR (work in collaboration with Prof.Hartmut Oskinat, FMP, Berlin). A long-term aim would be to study porins as templates for designing nanopores, for DNA sequencing and identification. I have expressed OmpG in inclusion bodies and refolded at an efficiency of >90% into a functional form using detergent. OmpG was then crystallized by 2D crystallization yielding an 8Å projection map whose structure was similar to native protein. In addition, these crystals were used for structure determination by solid state NMR. An initial spectrum of heavy isotopically labeled OmpG has allowed identification of specific amino acid residues including threonine and proline. Additionally, I obtained 3D crystals in detergent that diffract to 5.5Å and are being improved.
Riboswitches are a novel class of genetic control elements that function through the direct interaction of small metabolite molecules with structured RNA elements. The ligand is bound with high specificity and affinity to its RNA target and induces conformational changes of the RNA's secondary and tertiary structure upon binding. To elucidate the molecular basis of the remarkable ligand selectivity and affinity of one of these riboswitches, extensive all-atom molecular dynamics simulations in explicit solvent ({approx}1 µs total simulation length) of the aptamer domain of the guanine sensing riboswitch are performed. The conformational dynamics is studied when the system is bound to its cognate ligand guanine as well as bound to the non-cognate ligand adenine and in its free form. The simulations indicate that residue U51 in the aptamer domain functions as a general docking platform for purine bases, whereas the interactions between C74 and the ligand are crucial for ligand selectivity. These findings either suggest a two-step ligand recognition process, including a general purine binding step and a subsequent selection of the cognate ligand, or hint at different initial interactions of cognate and noncognate ligands with residues of the ligand binding pocket. To explore possible pathways of complex dissociation, various nonequilibrium simulations are performed which account for the first steps of ligand unbinding. The results delineate the minimal set of conformational changes needed for ligand release, suggest two possible pathways for the dissociation reaction, and underline the importance of long-range tertiary contacts for locking the ligand in the complex.
Intoxication of class II chloroplasts of spinach with Cu(II) leads to inhibition of millisecond luminescence. The degree of inhibition depends on Cu (II) -concentration. The investgation of the pH dpendence of the inhibition curve of luminescence revealed that (1) there is an inhibition site of copper on the donor side of photosystem II, (2) copper (II) does not act as an uncoupler of photophosphorylation, (3) a protonation equilibrium is involved in the inhibition mechanism, and (4) copper (II) binds to a dissociated residue of a membrane protein.
ncubation of class II chloroplasts of spinach with copper in the light at pH = 8 in concentrations that inhibit oxygen evolution results in the formation of a copper (II) protein complex with the photosynthetic membrane. The EPR spectra indicate that the four nearest ligands to Cu(II) consist of three oxygen atoms and one nitrogen atom. The copper (II) protein appears to be pre dominantly associated with photosystem II. The formation of this protein as measured by the EPR signal amplitude of its room temperature spectrum correlates with the inhibition of oxygen evolution and of electron transport within photosystem I. This result indicates that the inhibition of photosynthetic electron transport by copper may be due to the formation of a copper (II) chelate with a membrane protein.
Spectrophotometric investigation of the kinetics of the spontaneous reduction of the central metal ion in K2[Mn (IV)-2-α-hydroxyethyl-isochlorine e4] acetate in aqueous alkaline solution in the absence of any reducing agent reveals that it is a pseudo-first order reaction which is specifically hydroxide ion catalyzed. The pKα-value of the acid-base equilibrium has been estimated to be 14.4.
Electron transfer to the central metal ion is the rate limiting step. The measurements of its temperature dependence yields an activation enthalpy of ∆H‡ = 12 kcal/mol and an entropy of activation ∆S‡ = - 30 e.u. thus indicating that the electron transfer step is a bimolecular reaction. The most likely reactant is water. The reduction reaction does not take place with appreciable reaction rates at physiological pH. Thus, when bound to a suitable ligand of the chlorin type, Mn (IV)-compounds are sufficiently stable with respect to autoxidation to play some role in biological redox reactions as postulated recently for the photoreactivation process of the water splitting system in photosynthesis.
The hypothesis of GLIKMAN and ZABRODA (Biochemistry [USSR] 84,, 239 [1969]) that the primary electron donor during photoreduction of manganese(III) in Mn(III)-hydroxychlorin compounds in oxygen free aqueous alkaline solutions is the axially bound OH- ion was tested with Mn(III)-2-a-hydroxyethyl-isochlorin e4. It has been shown that
1) the primary generation of OH radicals upon irradiation of the complex is highly improbable,
2) light is not essential for the reduction reaction,
3) the kinetics of photoreduction of the Mn(III)-compound in 2 N NaOH clearly is not compatible with OH radical formation.
The effect of NH4Cl on the kinetics of the back reaction of photosystem II as derived from luminescence measurements was investigated in dark adapted Chlorella in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) at different temperatures. The kinetics of the back reaction which, under these conditions, leads to the reduction of the S2 state by the primary electron acceptor Q- of photosystem II was observed to be considerably slowed down in the presence of NH4Cl.
Analysis of the kinetic results in the light of the theory of the back reaction developed by Mar and Roy (J. Theor. Biol. 48, 257-281 (1974)) revealed two opposite effects of NH4Cl to be present simultaneously:
1) The enthalpy of activation of the back reaction was lowered (catalyzing effect of NH4Cl)
2) The frequenca factor which indicates the number of collisions of the reacting molecules in the membrane per second is largely decreased (inhibitory effect of NH4Cl).
This reduction of the mobility of the recombining species of the back reaction is the predominant effect of NH4Cl. It is suggested that this effect is due to a change of the conformational state of the membrane induced by dissolution of relative large amounts of NH? within the lipid phase of the thylakoid membrane. This hypothesis is supported by the observation that the value of the exciton yield of the back reaction changes upon addition of NH4Cl.
Photosystem II
It is shown that the kinetics of the back reaction of photosystem II in the seconds time range as derived from the luminescence decay curve in the presence of DCMU is controlled by the internal pH of the thylakoids. Modifications of the conformational state of the photosynthetic membrane while leaving the internal pH unchanged, however, reaction.
The electron paramagnetic resonance of copper (II)-tetrammine nitrate in solution of methanol and water has been investigated. The data obtained from the spectra at room temperature and 97 °K together with the optical transition energies determined from single crystal polarized absorption spectra at 77 °K by other authors were used to calculate the LCAO-MO bonding parameters. The bonding orbital of the ammonia molecule cannot be described by the concept of sp2 hybridization which was exclusively used in the theory. Therefore a calculation of the overlap integral S(n) for α bonding and of the superhyperfine splitting was carried out in terms of an arbitrary hybridization parametern. For ammonia, n was taken from the Duncan-Pople hybrid wave function for the lone pair orbital. The o bonding and the out-of-plane π bonding appear to have a moderate degree of covalency (α = Ϭ = 0.91; α’= 0.49). The covalent in-plane n bonding is somewhat stronger (β = 0.87) but is by no means so strongly covalent as is observed in compounds with ligands which do not exclusively coordinate through the lone pair electrons.
At low temperature nine ligand nuclear superhyperfine structure lines corresponding to the interaction of four magnetically equivalent nitrogen nuclei have been observed. The value of α' derived from the superhyperfine splitting is in excellent agreement with that obtained from the copper nucleus hyperfine structure.
Ziel der vorliegenden Dissertation war es, die Dynamik des Retinalchromophors in archaealen, bakteriellen sowie eukaryotischen Retinalproteinen zeitaufgelöst zu untersuchen und so Informationen über die unterschiedlichen lichtgesteuerten zyklischen Reaktionen zu erhalten. Für das bakterielle Proteorhodopsin (PR) wurde die Primärdynamik im sichtbaren Spektralbereich unter D2O-Bedingungen bei unterschiedlichen pD-Werten untersucht. Es zeigte sich, dass das isomerisierte K-Photoprodukt mit zwei Zeitkonstanten im Bereich von 1 ps und 20 ps gebildet wird. Der Vergleich mit Messungen in H2O erlaubte es den kinetischen Isotopeneffekt für die Deaktivierung des S1-Zustandes zu berechnen. Die Ergebnisse weisen dabei auf unterschiedliche Wasserstoffbrückenmuster unter sauren und alkalischen Bedingungen hin. Um diesem Resultat weiter nachzugehen, wurde die D97N-Mutante untersucht, bei der der primäre Protonenakzeptors ungeladen vorliegt. Die gefundene Primärdynamik von PR D97N läuft nur unwesentlich langsamer ab als die des Wildtyp-Proteins bei pD 6,4. Um weitergehende Einsichten in die Primärdynamik von PR zu erlangen, wurden am Wildtyp-Protein sowie der D97N-Mutante transiente Absorptionsmessungen im Bereich der C=C- und C=N-Schwingung des Retinals durchgeführt. Es stellte sich heraus, dass die Quantenausbeute der K-Bildung unabhängig vom pD-Wert ist. In einem weiteren Schritt wurde der Einfluss des hochkonservierten His-75 auf die Isomerisierungsdynamik untersucht. Hierfür wurden die Mutanten H75N und H75M verwendet. Die Kurzzeitmessungen lassen keinen ausgeprägten Einfluss auf die Isomerisierungsdynamik erkennen. Auch der nachfolgende Teil des Photozyklus war im Blickpunkt dieser Arbeit. Die Tieftemperaturstudien im sichtbaren Spektralbereich erlaubten das in kinetischen Messungen nicht beobachtete M-Intermediat des sauren Photozyklus nachzuweisen. Um strukturelle Einblicke in den Photozyklus zu erlangen und die am Pumpvorgang beteiligten Aminosäuren zu identifizieren, wurden nachfolgend Tieftemperaturuntersuchungen im infraroten Spektralbereich durchgeführt. Die Implementierung eines Faserspektrometers in den Strahlengang des FTIR-Aufbaus erlaubte hierbei die simultane Aufnahme der lichtinduzierten Änderungen der Bandenposition im sichtbaren Spektralbereich und der Änderungen der Proteinstruktur sowie der Seitenketten. Für den M-Zustand bei pH 5,1 konnte gezeigt werden, dass auch hier eine Aspartat- oder Glutamat-Seitenkette als Protonenakzeptor fungiert. Weiterhin konnte dargelegt werden, dass der Photozyklus von PR nicht nur vom pKa-Wert des Protonen-akzeptors Asp-97 abhängt, sondern von einem Zusammenspiel mehrerer pH-abhängiger Gleichgewichte, da schon kleinste Änderungen des pH-Werts im Bereich des pKa großen Einfluss auf die beobachteten Differenzspektren sowie die Dynamik haben. Auch für das in jüngster Vergangenheit zur optogenetischen Kontrolle neuronaler Netze eingesetzte eukaryotische Retinalprotein Channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR-2) wurden umfangreiche Photozyklusstudien durchgeführt. Mit Hilfe von transienter Absorptionsspektroskopie im Sichtbaren sowie der Fluoreszenz-aufkonvertierung konnte gezeigt werden, dass der angeregte Zustand monoexponentiell mit 0,4 ps zerfällt. Die Reaktion setzt sich mit einem Kühlprozess und kleineren Änderungen der Linienbreite des K-Photoprodukts fort. Durch die schnelle Deaktivierung des angeregten Zustands war es zudem möglich die direkten Auswirkungen der Retinalisomerisierung auf die Proteinumgebung zu beobachten. Die Vielzahl ausgeprägter Differenzbanden zeigte hierbei, dass neben der schnellen Isomerisierung auch der Energietransfer der im Retinal gespeicherten Überschussenergie an das Protein sehr effizient ist. Über Blitzlichtphotolyseexperimente konnte die Langzeitdynamik des ChR-2-Photozyklus erstmals mit einer sub-µs-Zeitauflösung charakterisiert werden. Neben der für Retinalproteine typischen Abfolge von blau- und rot-verschobenen Intermediaten, ist der Photozyklus mit einer Dauer von etwa 5 s signifikant langsamer als der gemeinhin schon langsame Zyklus der sensorischen Retinalproteine. Um die Aktivierungs-barrieren des ChR-2-Photozyklus zu untersuchen, wurden weiterhin temperaturabhängige Messungen durchgeführt. Diese ergaben, dass der Photozyklus durch entropische Faktoren bestimmt wird. In einem letzten Ansatzpunkt wurde die Imidazol-Abhängigkeit der Langzeitdynamik des ChR-2-Photozyklus untersucht. Es zeigte sich, dass die Dynamik um die De- und Reprotonierung stark von diesem externen Donor beeinflusst wird. Es wurde jedoch nicht nur eine Beschleunigung der Reprotonierungsreaktion beobachtet, sondern auch der molekulare Mechanismus scheint sich nach Zugabe von Imidazol geändert zu haben. Diese Effekte können am ehesten durch eine Verstärkung des Histidin-Donor-Effekts durch das strukturell verwandte Imidazol erklärt werden. Genau dieser Einfluss externer Donor-Moleküle stand ebenfalls in einer Kurzzeit-Studie archaealer Retinalproteine im Fokus. Vorausgegangene Studien konnten zeigen, dass die Zugabe von Azid-Anionen die Isomerisierungsdynamik sowie den nachfolgenden spektral stillen Übergang der Protonenakzeptor-mutante von SRII D75N beeinflusst. Die vorliegende Arbeit stellte heraus, dass dieser Effekt ein einzigartiges Merkmal dieser Mutante ist. Abschließend wurde überdies die Bedeutung des in der Zelle in 2:2-Stöchiometrie beobachteten Transducerkomplexes auf die Primärreaktion von SRII untersucht. Es zeigte sich, dass dieser keinen Einfluss auf die Isomerisierungsdynamik aufweist, was eine wichtige Information bezüglich der Signalweitergabe sensorischer Retinalproteine ist.
Enhanced labeling density and whole-cell 3D dSTORM imaging by repetitive labeling of target proteins
(2018)
With continuing advances in the resolving power of super-resolution microscopy, the inefficient labeling of proteins with suitable fluorophores becomes a limiting factor. For example, the low labeling density achieved with antibodies or small molecule tags limits attempts to reveal local protein nano-architecture of cellular compartments. On the other hand, high laser intensities cause photobleaching within and nearby an imaged region, thereby further reducing labeling density and impairing multi-plane whole-cell 3D super-resolution imaging. Here, we show that both labeling density and photobleaching can be addressed by repetitive application of trisNTA-fluorophore conjugates reversibly binding to a histidine-tagged protein by a novel approach called single-epitope repetitive imaging (SERI). For single-plane super-resolution microscopy, we demonstrate that, after multiple rounds of labeling and imaging, the signal density is increased. Using the same approach of repetitive imaging, washing and re-labeling, we demonstrate whole-cell 3D super-resolution imaging compensated for photobleaching above or below the imaging plane. This proof-of-principle study demonstrates that repetitive labeling of histidine-tagged proteins provides a versatile solution to break the "labeling barrier" and to bypass photobleaching in multi-plane, whole-cell 3D experiments.
The discovery of antibiotics represented a key milestone in the history of medicine. However, with the rise of these life-saving drugs came the awareness that bacteria deploy defense mechanisms to resist these antibiotics, and they are good at it. Today, we appear at a crossroads between discovery of new potent drugs and omni-resistant superbugs. Moreover, the misuse of antibiotics in different industries has increased the rate of resistance development by providing permanent selective pressure and, subsequently, enrichment of multidrug resistant pathogens. As a result, antimicrobial resistance has now become an urgent threat to public health worldwide (http:// www.who.int/drugresistance/documents/surveillancereport/en/). The development of multidrug resistance (MDR) in an increasing number of pathogens, including Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Klebsiella, Salmonella, Burkholderia, and other Gram-negative bacteria is a serious issue. Membrane efflux pump complexes of the Resistance-Nodulation-Division (RND) superfamily play a key role in the development of MDR in these bacteria. These pumps, together with other transporters, contribute to intrinsic and acquired resistance of bacteria toward most, if not all, of the compounds available in our antimicrobial arsenal. Given the enormous drug polyspecificity of MDR efflux pumps, studies on their mechanism of action are extremely challenging, and this has negatively impacted both on the development of new antibiotics that are able to evade these efflux pumps and on the design of pump inhibitors. The collection of articles in this eBook, published as a Research Topic in Frontiers in Microbiology, section of Antimicrobials, Resistance, and Chemotherapy, aims to update the reader about the latest advances on the structure and function of RND efflux transporters, their roles in the overall multidrug resistance phenotype of Gram-negative pathogens, and on the strategies to inhibit their activities. ...
The structure of the title compound, (C15H15N2O4)[AgI2], consists of an organic 4-[3-(isonicotinoyloxy)propoxycarbonyl]pyridinium cation which has a gauche–gauche (O/C/C/C—O/C/C/C or GG’) conformation and lies on a twofold rotation axis, which passes through the central C atom of the aliphatic chain, and an inorganic [AgI2]− anion. In the complex anion, the Ag+ cation is bound to two I− anions in a linear geometry. The anion was modelled assuming disorder around a crystallographic inversion centre near the location of the Ag+ cation. The crystal packing is stabilized by a strong intermolecular N—H[cdots, three dots, centered]N hydrogen bond, which links the cations into zigzag chains with graph-set notation C(16) running along the face diagonal of the ac plane. The N-bound H atom is disordered over two equally occupied symmetry-equivalent sites, so that the molecule has a pyridinium ring at one end and a pyridine ring at the other.
In the title compound, [Ag(BF4)(C14H12N2O4)]n, the coordination of the Ag+ ion is trigonal–bipyramidal with the N atoms of two ethane-1,2-diyl bis(pyridine-3-carboxylate) ligands in the apical positions and three F atoms belonging to different tetrafluoridoborate anions in the equatorial plane. The material consists of infinite chains of [Ag(C14H12N2O4)] units running along [001], held together by BF4 − bridging anions.
Molecules of the title compound (alternative name: butane-1,4-diyl dinicotinate), C16H16N2O4, lie on a inversion centre, located at the mid-point of the central C—C bond of the aliphatic chain, giving one half-molecule per asymmetric unit. The butane chain adopts an all-trans conformation. The dihedral angle between the mean plane of the butane-3-carboxylate group [for the non-H atoms, maximum deviation = 0.0871 (15) Å] and the pyridine ring is 10.83 (7)°. In the crystal, molecules lie in planes parallel to (122). The structure features weak π–π interactions with a centroid–centroid distance of 3.9281 (11) Å.
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit ist es gelungen, die über die 1,´-Position phenylenverbrückten Bis(silolyl)verbindungen 120, 123, 125, 156, 158, 160, 135, 137 und 139, sowie die entsprechenden Phenylsilole 126, 163 und 141 (siehe Schema 4.1) zu synthetisieren und NMR-spektroskopisch, massenspektroskopisch und zum Teil auch durch Kristallstrukturen zu charakterisieren. Weiterhin ist es gelungen eine über die 3,3´-Position verknüpfte phenylenverbrückte Bis(silolyl)verbindung 175, sowie auch die Vorstufe zu einer 2,2´-verknüpften Bis(silolyl)verbindung 177 zu synthetisieren und zweifelsfrei zu charakterisieren.
Antibody library technology represents a powerful tool for the discovery and design of antibodies with high affinity and specificity for their targets. To extend the technique to the expression and selection of antibody libraries in an eukaryotic environment, we provide here a proof of concept that retroviruses can be engineered for the display and selection of variable single-chain fragment (scFv) libraries. A retroviral library displaying the repertoire obtained after a single round of selection of a human synthetic scFv phage display library on laminin was generated. For selection, antigen-bound virus was efficiently recovered by an overlay with cells permissive for infection. This approach allowed more than 10(3)-fold enrichment of antigen binders in a single selection cycle. After three selection cycles, several scFvs were recovered showing similar laminin-binding activities but improved expression levels in mammalian cells as compared with a laminin-specific scFv selected by the conventional phage display approach. Thus, translational problems that occur when phage-selected antibodies have to be transferred onto mammalian expression systems to exert their therapeutic potential can be avoided by the use of retroviral display libraries.
Methanogenic archaea share one ion gradient forming reaction in their energy metabolism catalyzed by the membrane-spanning multisubunit complex N5-methyl-tetrahydromethanopterin: coenzyme M methyltransferase (MtrABCDEFGH or simply Mtr). In this reaction the methyl group transfer from methyl-tetrahydromethanopterin to coenzyme M mediated by cobalamin is coupled with the vectorial translocation of Na+ across the cytoplasmic membrane. No detailed structural and mechanistic data are reported about this process. In the present work we describe a procedure to provide a highly pure and homogenous Mtr complex on the basis of a selective removal of the only soluble subunit MtrH with the membrane perturbing agent dimethyl maleic anhydride and a subsequent two-step chromatographic purification. A molecular mass determination of the Mtr complex by laser induced liquid bead ion desorption mass spectrometry (LILBID-MS) and size exclusion chromatography coupled with multi-angle light scattering (SEC-MALS) resulted in a (MtrABCDEFG)3 heterotrimeric complex of ca. 430 kDa with both techniques. Taking into account that the membrane protein complex contains various firmly bound small molecules, predominantly detergent molecules, the stoichiometry of the subunits is most likely 1:1. A schematic model for the subunit arrangement within the MtrABCDEFG protomer was deduced from the mass of Mtr subcomplexes obtained by harsh IR-laser LILBID-MS.
Some physical and chemical properties of the cancerostat cyclophosphamide (generic name: ENDOXAN) and its basic constituents H3PO4 and nor-N-mustard have been calculated with the help of a modified CNDO/S-method. The spectroscopic data of the H3PO4 , which is the starting-point for a corresponding calculation of cyclophosphamide, has been studied by taking account of the 3 d electron of the phosphorus. Nor-N-mustard is a very reactive compound, characterized by the ability to split off chloride ions and to act as an alkylating agent. The binding of the nor-N-mustard to the cyclic phosphate ester (cyclophosphamide) modifies the chemical reactivity of the mustard group in an essential way, and the 3d electron of the phosphorus plays an important role with respect to the excitability of the C -Cl bonds. Cyclophosphamide must be metabolized in a suitable way to develop the same alkylating activity as the nor-N-mustard. The computation of the excited states of cyclophosphamide revealed a similar term scheme as it was found by Clar in the case of the carcinogenic polycyclic hydrocarbons.