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In their idealized forms, enzymes can facilitate complex reactions with extreme specificity and selectivity. Additionally, in this imaginative form, they only require mild reaction conditions, resulting in low energy consumption, and they are biodegradable, efficient, reusable, and sustainable. Unfortunately, this idealized form often deviates significantly from reality, where enzymes are more likely to be associated with marginal stability and low reaction rates, leaving them less than desirable for many industrial applications. As such, if we could master the process of engineering the configuration of a protein towards a given task, the implications could be staggering.
This thesis aims to contribute to the process of protein engineering, mainly how computational tools can be used to make the protein engineering process more efficient and accessible.
Article I explores the current state of the art in machine learning-guided directed evolution and serves as a foundation for Article II, which is a concrete application of these techniques to an engineering campaign. Despite successfully improving overall activity and selectivity, we also observe limitations and constraints within the methodology. Article III then delves into these drawbacks and attempts to lay the foundation for a more generalizable and, more importantly, efficient engineering workflow, balancing the strengths and weaknesses of computational techniques with advances in gene synthesis. We then validated this novel pipeline in Article IV, where we show the potential of this methodology. Article V describes a more standard protein engineering campaign on squalene-hopene cyclases for potentially interesting products in the flavor and fragrance industry. Lastly, Article VI outlines a PyMol plugin for molecular docking.
Autoclaved aerated concrete (AAC) is a building material that combines heat insulation
properties with sufficient mechanical strength for masonry construction. Compared to
ordinary concrete, the matrix is highly porous (>50%) and hardened by a hydrothermal curing
process at 150°C - 200°C. During this process, quartz sand and portlandite react to form first
calcium silicate hydrates (C-(A)-S-H) with Ca/Si ratios <1.3 and then tobermorite. Especially
tobermorite, which has a much larger crystallite size than C-(A)-S-H, provides improved
mechanical strength. This reaction sequence is influenced by many parameters and
additives of which calcium sulfate is probably the most important. Despite several attempts to
investigate these hydrothermal reactions, the actual reaction mechanism involved when
adding sulfate ions is not fully understood. It has been suggested that the addition of ca.
1.5 wt% significantly improves the mechanical properties due to the enhanced formation and
arrangement of tobermorite in the porous matrix. Since the sulfate content in AAC waste is
exceeding regulatory threshold for low-quality reuse in some countries, the aim of this study
was to investigate in detail the reaction mechanisms involving sulfate addition. Such
knowledge may open up the possibility to improve AAC production and to avoid the need for
sulfate addition. To achieve this goal, this research work focused on investigating the
hydrothermal curing process to determine the sequence of hydrothermal reactions and the
spatial distribution of the phases formed. For this purpose, a new setup for in situ X-ray
diffraction was specifically designed to study hydrothermal reactions and to conduct time
intensive experiments on a normal laboratory diffractometer. In order to quantitatively
evaluate the in situ measurements by Rietveld analysis using TOPAS, it was also necessary
to develop atomistic structure models for C-(A)-S-H phases. This was made possible by
adopting a supercell approach that was previously used to describe turbostratically stacked
clay minerals. The structure models, derived from tobermorite, are placed in an otherwise
empty supercell to simulate the C-(A)-S-H nanostructure. Adopting these methodological
advances, it was possible to obtain absolute phase quantities from in situ data and to track
the reaction kinetics of the hydrothermal curing process. These results were then combined
with ex situ X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopy. Confirming previous studies,
the major effect of sulfate ions was the formation and decomposition of hydroxylellestadite. It
was further revealed that C-(A)-S-H formation was delayed during hydroxylellestadite
formation, which is supposed to support the silicate ion diffusion and hence the tobermorite
formation at a stage critical for improved hardening of AAC. This can be linked to the
formation of lower amounts of capillary pores in the range of 1-5 µm, as observed by
scanning electron microscopy, and therefore a lower concentration of inherent defects that
resulted in the improved mechanical properties. This research work highlights how important the spatial distribution of crystallites is for the properties of a building material and how this
distribution can be influenced by small alterations in reaction chemistry.
This dissertation explores and tries to unravel the fundamental basis of G-quadruplex end-folding as well as G-quadruplex interactions with small molecules by thermodynamic and structural approaches. Selective targeting of G-quadruplexes with ligands remains elusive, either because the ligand has
considerable binding affinity for other DNA structures or because it fails to discriminate between different G-quadruplex topologies. Unique structural motifs on the G-quadruplex may enhance or inhibit ligand binding to the G-quadruplex. For such aspects, it is necessary to understand the effect of G-quadruplex motifs or elements on the end-folding in order to better tune certain G-quadruplex topologies as model systems. Importantly for targeting G-quadruplex with ligands, motifs called Quadruplex-duplex (QD) junctions and interfaces are shown to be a binding hotspot
for various G-quadruplex ligands containing an intercalator motif. Binding affinity and selectivity of the ligands are discussed with the support of the NMR structures.
In vitro assays play a crucial role in the biopharmaceutical assessment of drugs. During the past two decades, biorelevant media became an indispensable tool to forecast the in vivo solubility and dissolution of pharmaceutical drug candidates, and to assess absorption risks like low solubility or drug precipitation. Nevertheless, in vitro set-ups are still a simplification of the conditions in the human GI tract. This thesis aimed to shed light on some of the remaining open questions, aiming at providing a better understanding of the effects of biorelevant media on solubility, dissolution, and precipitation processes, and providing guidance for a more streamlined usage in the future. The results of this work can be outlined in brief as follows: First, a new design of experiment-based method development was introduced which increased the robustness and accuracy of derivative UV spectrophotometric methods for drug quantification in biorelevant precipitation assays. Second, based on this new approach, the impact of SIF powder aging on the supersaturation and precipitation behavior of the model drug ketoconazole was investigated. Recommendations on the use of biorelevant media for precipitation assays were developed to further improve the reproducibility of transfer experiments and to enhance data reliability. Third, it was investigated under which circumstances the physiological bicarbonate buffer should be applied to Fasted State Simulated Intestinal Fluid medium for in vitro solubility, dissolution, and precipitation testing to resemble the in vivo conditions.
Marine algae are essential for fixation of carbon dioxide, which they transform into complex polysaccharides. These carbohydrates are degraded e.g., by marine Bacteroidetes and the understanding of their decomposition mechanism can expand our knowledge how marine biomasses can be accessed. This understanding then gains insights into the marine carbon
cycle. This thesis summarizes the current knowledge of marine enzymatic polysaccharide degradation in review Article I and extents a previously discovered ulvan degradation pathway in Article II with the description of a novel dehydratase involved in the ulvan degradation pathway. This enlarged ulvan-degradation pathway can be used to generate fermentable sugars from the algal derived polysaccharide ulvan. A potential biorefinery process is proposed in Article III, where B. licheniformis was engineered to degrade ulvan, thus establishing the initial steps for a microbial cell factory development. In addition to ulvan, also plenty of other complex carbohydrate sources are present in the ocean. The enzymatic elucidation principles previously developed were thus adapted towards a new marine carbohydrate. In Article IV a xylan utilization pathway was elucidated, using enzymes present in Flavimarina Hel_I_48 as model bacterium. The Flavimarina genome contains two separated genome clusters which potentially targets xylose containing polymers reflecting the diversity and adaptions towards different marine xylan-like substrates. Besides, marine Bacteroidetes are adapted towards decomposition of methylated polysaccharide, e.g., porphyran, via demethylation catalyzed by cytochrome P450 monooxygenases. This reaction results in the formation of toxic formaldehyde and thus the marine Bacteroidetes require formaldehyde detoxification principles. The analysis of potential formaldehyde detoxification mechanisms revealed a marine RuMP pathway (Article V) and a novel auxiliary activity of an alcohol dehydrogenase of which the encoding gene is adjacent to the demethylase cluster (Article VI).
The relevance of cold atmospheric plasmas (CAPs) in biomedicine has recently grown. The potential of CAPs has been discussed in multiple scientific works, highlighting its effectiveness in promoting wound healing, limiting cancer progression, and for sterilization of surfaces. Main bioactive molecules, such as reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS), are proposed as key candidates in these processes. Indeed, the generation of cold plasma induces noble gas ionization which, reacting with atmospheric air molecules, generates species such as singlet oxygen, atomic oxygen radicals, nitric oxide radicals. Although molecular simulations have been conducted, the mechanism of action on biological molecules, as well as the possibility to tune plasmas to produce specific species cocktails (e.g., with different degree of oxidation power) has been not fully unleashed. In this dissertation, presented in form of 5 published scientific articles, focus has been placed on the interaction of plasmas with peptides and proteins, which are main biological effectors in cellular compartments. Precisely, through the development of liquid chromatography coupled mass spectrometry (LC-MS) methods, the effects of plasmas on peptides and proteins in form of oxidative post-translational modifications (oxPTMs) has been investigated. The characterization of these oxPTMs has been performed by treating peptide or protein aqueous solutions and on porcine skin tissues. It has been found that, introducing small amounts of different gases (oxygen, nitrogen, or both) or even water molecules, can made CAPs tunable tools to produce oxygen-species dominating effects versus nitrogen-species dominating effects. In addition to this, it was found that the amino acid position in a peptide or protein influences the quality and quantity of the resulting oxPTMs. Besides this, other important parameters like driven gases, admixture gases or treatment duration were identified as relevant factors for the modification of amino acids in the peptide structure. By comparing the effects between peptide solutions and complex matrices such as porcine skin, water has been identified as a valid vehicle to transport and amplify the plasma chemistry. In an experimental study, the inactivation of a protein (PLA2) was observed after CAP treatment and together with simulation studies, the specific dioxidation of tryptophane W128 was detected as a potential explanation for this inactivation, indicating the strong impact of plasma on biological targets. In summary, oxidative modifications found in peptide solutions were observed also in complex protein structures and sample matrices. In conclusion, this work provides a starting point for future studies of oxidative modifications in complex models and may thus be helpful for further investigations in the fields of plasma medicine and redox chemistry.
This work investigated the enzymatic degradation of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) (ArticlesI and II) and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) (Article III). Physical or chemical degradation of plastic polymers is often performed under extreme conditions like high temperatures or pressure. In comparison to that, recycling of plastics with enzymes can be carried out at ambient temperatures and neutral pH. Enzymes themselves are non- toxic, environmentally friendly, and have been used successfully in a variety of industrial processes.
Enzymatic degradation of polyesters is well studied. Their heteroatomic backbone, which is connecting monomers via ester bonds offers a target for an enzymatic attack. Especially PET, one of the most common polyesters, has been in the focus of research. The first enzyme capable of degrading the polymer was found in 2005. Since then, researchers discovered several enzymes with similar functions and subjected them to enzyme engineering. Improving the enzyme's substrate affinity, activity, and stability aims at making PET recycling more efficient. Article I provides an overview of limitations that enzymatic PET recycling is still facing and the research carried out to overcome them. More precisely, enzyme−substrate interactions, thermostability, catalytic efficiency, and inhibition caused by oligomeric degradation intermediates are summarized and discussed in detail.
Article II further addresses one of the above-mentioned limitations, namely product inhibition of PET hydrolyzing enzymes. We elucidated the crystal structure of TfCa, a carboxylesterase from Thermobifida fusca (T. fusca), and applied semi-rational enzyme engineering. The article discusses the structure-function relationship of TfCa based on the apo-structure as well as ligand-soaked structures. Furthermore, it compares the structures of TfCa and MHETase, another PET hydrolase helper enzyme. Lastly, we determined the substrate profile of the carboxylesterase based on terephthalate-based oligo-esters of various lengths and one ortho-phthalate ester. In a dual enzyme system, TfCa degraded intermediate products derived from the PET hydrolysis of a variant of PETase hydrolase from Ideonella sakaiensis (I. sakaiensis). The dual enzyme system utilized PET more efficiently in comparison to solely PETase due to relieved product inhibition. Since TfCa successfully degraded oligomeric intermediates, the reaction not only released terephthalic acid as the sole product but also increased the overall product yield.
While PET contains an ester bond that can be attacked and hydrolyzed by esterases or lipases, PVA consists of a homoatomic C-C-backbone with repeating 1,3-diol units. The polymer is water soluble with remarkable physical properties such as thermostability and viscosity. PVA is often described as biodegradable, but microbial degradation is slow and frequently involves cost-intensive cofactors. In this study, we present an improved PVA polymer with derivatized side chains and an enzyme cascade that can degrade not only modified but also unmodified PVA in a one-pot reaction. The enzyme cascade consists of a lipase, an alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), and a Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenase (BVMO). In comparison to the scarcely published research on PVA degradation with free enzyme, this cascade is not only independent from the frequently required cofactor pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) but, in principle, contains an in vitro cofactor recycling mechanism.
Enzymes are well-known for being remarkably selective catalysts. They are often able to catalyse reactions for certain molecules while leaving other similar molecules completely unchanged. Nevertheless, many enzymes are capable of catalysing other reactions and/or transforming other substrates than their physiologically relevant activities. This phenomenon is referred to as enzyme promiscuity and it is thought to play an important role in the emergence of novel functions by providing a starting point for divergent evolution towards different enzymatic activities. It is important for enzymes to be selective to avoid harmful side-products and increase reaction efficiency, but often catalysts are not optimised beyond what is required for their function. Life profits from the cross-reactivity and enzyme promiscuity through accidental discovery of new helpful molecules and pathways, while using regulation to quickly adapt to changing circumstances.
Enzymes are grouped together with other similar proteins into structural families and superfamilies. Members of a structural family share significant structural elements and often have similar catalytic mechanisms. However, they often catalyse very different chemical reactions and accept a variety of different substrates. Promiscuous activities are common within superfamilies, where the primary function of one family member is often found as promiscuous activity in other family members. Together with the structural similarities, this prevalent cross-reactivity suggests a common evolutionary origin. One of the largest structural superfamilies is the α/β-hydrolase-fold family. Despite sharing a highly conserved core structure, this superfamily is catalytically diverse and spans several distinct enzyme classes including hydrolases, acyltransferases, oxidoreductases, lyases, and isomerases. Epoxide hydrolases and dehalogenases of the α/β-hydrolase-fold family even share the same Asp/Glu-His-Asp catalytic triad and form similar covalent alkyl-enzyme reaction intermediates, yet they are known for attacking either epoxides or C-X bonds with perfect chemoselectivity. Although promiscuity is often observed within the α/β-hydrolase fold family and despite their mechanistic similarities, no α/β-hydrolases were known that exhibit both epoxide hydrolase and dehalogenase activity simultaneously.
The versatility of the catalytic triads used by α/β-hydrolases makes these enzymes attractive targets for the conversion of catalytic activity through protein engineering. Several attempts were made to introduce dehalogenase activity in an epoxide hydrolase, and after several rounds of designing and screening different variants of the epoxide hydrolase PaeCIF from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, minor dehalogenase activity was detected for some of the variants. However, despite promising first results it proved extremely difficult to reliably reproduce the results, primarily due to expression problems and low sensitivity of the halide detection assays that were available at the time. Since the conversion proved to be more difficult than expected (unpublished data), it was decided to investigate other potential protein scaffolds.
Considering the prevalence of catalytic promiscuity among members of the α/β-hydrolase-fold superfamily, and the close relationship and catalytic similarities between epoxide hydrolases and dehalogenases, it seemed odd that no enzyme is known to have both epoxide hydrolase and dehalogenase activity. We argued that it is highly probable that a promiscuous epoxide hydrolase-dehalogenase enzyme exists, but it simply has not been found yet due to the absence of sensitive high-throughput halide assays and not screening the right set of enzymes. Although several established assays were available for the determination of dehalogenase activity, these assays suffer major drawbacks. For example, one of the most popular assays, the Iwasaki assay, is not very sensitive and uses extremely toxic chemicals, while pH assays like the phenol red assay are inherently unreliable and insensitive due to the low buffer concentrations employed107,114. Thus, a new assay for the screening of dehalogenase activity through the selective detection of halides was developed115. The halide oxidation assay provides a safer, more reliable, and most importantly, much more sensitive method to detect dehalogenase activity.
Using molecular phylogenetics, we studied the evolutionary relationship between epoxide hydrolases and dehalogenases to identify interesting extant epoxide hydrolases. Molecular phylogenetics uses a multiple sequence alignment of the amino acid or nucleotide sequences of extant enzymes to construct a phylogenetic tree. At first, we tried using a large dataset with almost 3,500 putative epoxide hydrolase and dehalogenase sequences, but we quickly realised the resulting phylogenetic tree was impractical. Most of the sequences in this large dataset were not characterised experimentally but annotated automatically based on their sequence similarity to a rather limited number of characterised sequences. Although automated annotations can be used as predictions for catalytic activity, they are often wrong. As we were particularly interested in the interface of both epoxide hydrolase and dehalogenase activities, we needed more certainty and a change in direction was necessary.
Instead of trying to filter the α/β-hydrolase fold database, experimentally characterised sequences were collected through literature research. This smaller dataset consisting of characterised sequences resulted in a phylogenetic tree containing 45 epoxide hydrolases, 30 haloalkane dehalogenases and 7 haloacetate dehalogenases from a variety of different organisms. Ancestral sequence reconstruction was attempted for several interesting nodes in this phylogenetic tree. By combining the multiple sequence alignment, the evolutionary relationships from the phylogenetic tree, and evolutionary models, a hypothetical sequence of the theoretical ancestor can be determined. Unfortunately, it was difficult to get good soluble protein expression with the ancestral sequences and despite our best efforts it was not possible to obtain reliable and reproducible screening results. Instead of trying to improve protein expression and purification protocols for the ancestral sequences, we decided to focus on screening extant sequences with the newly developed halide oxidation assay to find a promiscuous epoxide hydrolase-dehalogenase.
In addition to reconstructing ancestral sequences, eight extant epoxide hydrolases could be selected for screening towards dehalogenase activity and as promising potential engineering scaffolds from this phylogenetic tree. The eight selected epoxide hydrolases were screened for dehalogenase activity with several haloalkane substrates and the epoxide hydrolase CorEH from Corynebacterium sp. C12 was found to exhibit promiscuous dehalogenase activity. Interestingly, the measured concentrations of bromide for the initial hit with CorEH were only 150-250 nM, well below the lowest detection limit of 20 µM achievable in microtiter plate format with the Iwasaki assay. This means that the dehalogenase activity of CorEH would probably not have been detected were it not for the development of the sensitive halide oxidation assay.
CorEH is an epoxide hydrolase that can also catalyse the dehalogenation of haloalkanes, particularly bromoalkanes such as 1-bromobutane and 1-bromohexane. The dehalogenase activity of wild-type CorEH with 1-bromobutane (0.25 nmol·min-1·mg-1) is about 4,000-fold lower than the average activity of several natural dehalogenases with two halide-stabilising residues (1 μmol·min-1·mg-1) and approximately 400-fold lower compared to the dehalogenases with a single halide-stabilising residue. The crystal structure of CorEH was determined to 2.2 Å. Our structure-function studies suggest that the dehalogenase activity of CorEH probably stems from the presence of at least one halide-stabilising residue. Unfortunately, this could not be confirmed experimentally via mutagenesis as the W100A variant lost both the dehalogenase and epoxide hydrolase activity in equal measure, making it difficult to demonstrate that W100 is involved in halide stabilisation. The loss of both activities for variant W100A can possibly be explained by the secondary function of the tryptophan; removal of W100 might lead to the incorrect positioning of the catalytic nucleophile for the nucleophilic attack involved in both epoxide hydrolysis and dehalogenation. Nevertheless, computational modelling of Michaelis-Menten complexes, utilising the crystal structure of CorEH, supports the hypothesis that the tryptophan W100 is involved in halide stabilisation in CorEH. Based on docking studies, the epoxide ring-opening tyrosine is also close enough to form hydrogen bonds to stabilise the substrate. However, it is also possible that like several characterised haloalkane dehalogenases, CorEH only uses a single residue to stabilise the halide. Removal of the tryptophan at the primary halide-stabilising position resulted in the loss of both activities, likely due to the loss of its secondary function to properly position the catalytic nucleophile. Substitution of the uncommon tryptophan in the HGxP-motif with phenylalanine does not completely remove the dehalogenase activity. Nevertheless, it causes a significant drop in both haloalkane dehalogenase and epoxide hydrolase activities, indicating that this residue is important for catalysis or the structural integrity of CorEH.
Enzyme promiscuity plays an important role in enzyme evolution and the diversification of enzymes. Several researchers have attempted to interconvert epoxide hydrolase and dehalogenase activity, or to find an enzyme with both activities, without success. It would be hard to maintain the view that promiscuity is a fundamental property crucial to enzyme evolution if we could not observe promiscuity between two enzyme classes with such similar reaction mechanisms. Our findings show that dual epoxide hydrolase and dehalogenase activity can occur in one natural protein scaffold. We believe that we succeeded because we used a phylogenetic analysis of characterised sequences to select the right subset of epoxide hydrolases to investigate and due to the much more sensitive halide assays not available to those before us. The versatility of the catalytic triad in α/β-hydrolases combined with the variety of possible supporting residues found in both epoxide hydrolases and dehalogenases shows that catalytic mechanisms can be flexible. This flexibility allows space for diversification of catalytic residues without loss of function, giving rise to novel (promiscuous) functions and new cross-reactivities.
The hairpin ribozyme is a small Mg2+-dependent catalytic RNA molecule able to catalyze the trans-cleavage of an RNA substrate via a reversible trans-esterification mechanism. In this study, the cleavage activities of several fragmented hairpin ribozyme systems were examined. Due to the complex catalytic structure of the hairpin ribozyme, a new boronic acid ester was used as a covalent linkage to hold the folding of the functional system. It has been demonstrated the possibility of replacing the phosphodiester linkage, at specific positions, with a boronic acid ester to restore or improve the catalytic activity of fragmented hairpin ribozyme.
Long-chain aliphatic amines such as (S,Z)-hepta- dec-9-en-7-amine and 9-aminoheptadecane were synthesized from ricinoleic acid and oleic acid, respectively, by whole-cell cascade reactions using the combination of an alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) from Micrococcus luteus, an engi- neered amine transaminase from Vibrio fluvialis (Vf-ATA), and a photoactivated decarboxylase from Chlorella variabilis NC64A (Cv-FAP) in a one-pot process. In addition, long chain aliphatic esters such as 10-(heptanoyloxy)dec-8-ene and octyl- nonanoate were prepared from ricinoleic acid and oleic acid, respectively, by using the combination of the ADH, a Baeyer– Villiger monooxygenase variant from Pseudomonas putida KT2440, and the Cv-FAP. The target compounds were produced at rates of up to 37 U g1 dry cells with conversions up to 90 %. Therefore, this study contributes to the preparation of industrially relevant long-chain aliphatic chiral amines and esters from renewable fatty acid resources.
Biocatalytic Production of Amino Carbohydrates through Oxidoreductase and Transaminase Cascades
(2019)
Plant-derived carbohydrates are an abundant renewable re- source. Transformation of carbohydrates into new products, in- cluding amine-functionalized building blocks for biomaterials applications, can lower reliance on fossil resources. Herein, bio- catalytic production routes to amino carbohydrates, including oligosaccharides, are demonstrated. In each case, two-step bio- catalysis was performed to functionalize d-galactose-contain- ing carbohydrates by employing the galactose oxidase from Fusarium graminearum or a pyranose dehydrogenase from
Agaricus bisporus followed by the w-transaminase from Chro- mobacterium violaceum (Cvi-w-TA). Formation of 6-amino-6- deoxy-d-galactose, 2-amino-2-deoxy-d-galactose, and 2-amino- 2-deoxy-6-aldo-d-galactose was confirmed by mass spectrome- try. The activity of Cvi-w-TA was highest towards 6-aldo-d-gal- actose, for which the highest yield of 6-amino-6-deoxy-d-galac- tose (67%) was achieved in reactions permitting simultaneous oxidation of d-galactose and transamination of the resulting 6- aldo-d-galactose.
Promiscuous Dehalogenase Activity of the Epoxide Hydrolase CorEH from Corynebacterium sp. C12
(2021)
Haloalkane dehalogenases and epoxide hydrolases are phylogenetically related and structurally homologous enzymes that use nucleophilic aspartate residues for an SN2 attack on their substrates. Despite their mechanistic similarities, no enzymes are known that exhibit both epoxide hydrolase and dehalogenase activity. We screened a subset of epoxide hydrolases, closely related to dehalogenases, for dehalogenase activity and found that the epoxide hydrolase CorEH from Corynebacterium sp. C12 exhibits promiscuous dehalogenase activity. Compared to the hydrolysis of epoxides like cyclohexene oxide (1.41 μmol min–1 mg–1), the dehalogenation of haloalkanes like 1-bromobutane (0.25 nmol min–1 mg–1) is about 5000-fold lower. In addition to the activity with 1-bromobutane, dehalogenase activity was detected with other substrates like 1-bromohexane, 1,2-dibromoethane, 1-iodobutane, and 1-iodohexane. This study shows that dual epoxide hydrolase and dehalogenase activity can be present in one naturally occurring protein scaffold.
The investigation of complex molecular systems by molecular dynamics simulations has been successfully established and proven as a standard method during the last decades. The use of highly optimized algorithms and steadily increasing, generally available computing resources enables even larger and longer simulations. However, the dynamics of the system itself is not accelerated, and it can be trapped in low energy minima that can only be overcome slowly. A number of methods have therefore been developed to address this problem.
Within the context of this dissertation, a novel algorithm based on replica exchange was developed to solve problems with existing methods, which can now be used for large molecular systems with a low resource consumption. Parameter dependence was systematically evaluated and optimized to define guidelines for correct application. This algorithm was successfully applied to various pharmaceutical and biochemical problems, such as protein folding or protein-protein interactions.
Analysis of bioactive lipids from different infection models during bacterial and viral infections
(2021)
Bioactive lipids or lipid mediators influence numerous processes like the reproduction, the bone turnover, the pain perception, the cardiovascular function and the immune system. Eicosanoids and oxylipins are parts of the immunomodulatory lipid mediators, which can be synthesized from polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) by enzymatic and non-enzymatic reactions. Typical members of eicosanoids are prostaglandins and leukotrienes. The properties of bioactive lipids include the activation of inflammatory reactions as well as the support of resolution. Like hormones, they act locally restricted and in low concentrations. Further bioactive lipids exist i.e. intermediates of the sphingolipid class. The biosynthesis of some of these compounds like the prostaglandins can be influenced by different drugs whereas for other groups of lipid selective inhibitors are still missing. Their impact on inflammatory processes and against chronic diseases has already been analyzed, while studies in context with infection are largely limited. Infection of the upper respiratory tract caused by viral and bacterial pathogens constitute a huge burden for the human healthcare. The main pathogens are the Influenza A virus (IAV), Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus), Streptococcus pneumoniae (S. pneumoniae) and Streptococcus pyogenes (S. pyogenes). Besides mono-infection with one of these pathogens, frequently occurring bacto-viral co-infections exist, which negatively influence the etiopathology. The main task of the immune system is the detection and the elimination of pathogens, which can essentially be affected by lipid mediators. Their instability due to oxidizability, the existence of regioisomers and the low abundance of eicosanoids and other oxylipins are the main problems for their analytical measurement.
The mayor objective of this dissertation was the establishment of a suitable analytical method for selected lipid mediators and the detection of infection-related changes. The separation and detection was performed by using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) coupled with triple quad mass spectrometry. This combination is called tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). The MS parameters were optimized for approximately 30 lipid mediators by use of chemical standards and the detection was achieved by dynamic multiple reaction monitoring (MRM). Furthermore, the spatial resolution of selected sphingolipids was analyzed in tissue samples using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI-MS-Imaging). Concerning the HPLC-MS/MS detection, an MS method was established and optimized with standard compounds. Another crucial part of the establishment was the extraction of bioactive lipids from the different sampling materials. Whereas well tested protocols exist for the extraction and detection of lipid mediators, such protocols for MALDI-MS-Imaging are still limited due to the novelty of this measurement. Ultimately, robust and reproducible protocols for both techniques that were used for the analysis of a broad array of samples from infection experiments were established for both techniques. The analyses of infected cell culture, mice and pigs revealed infection-related perturbations of host lipid mediator levels. Depending on the scientific issue, the sample types cell pellets, lungs, spleens, livers, blood plasmas, pawns including bones or bronchoalveolar lavages were analyzed. For MALDI-MS-Imaging, the spatial distribution of sphingolipids in lung and spleen was detected.
The present dissertation includes four coherent research scopes, in which the pathogen impact on host-derived lipid mediators was detected with the above mentioned analytical methods. The infection models epithelial cells (article II), mouse (article III and IV) and pig (article I) – the latter as the most human like model - showed different aspects of the host-pathogen interaction. The analysis of samples from IAV infection for all three hosts revealed a couple of similarities for some oxylipins that were also described in human infections. Additionally, cell culture and mouse samples from mono-infections as well as co-infections with the pathogens S. aureus and S. pneumoniae were measured. In particular for the bacterial mono- and co-infections, these are the first published results with aspects of infection related changes of lipid mediators. The additional spatial resolution of the sphingolipid intermediates sphingosine 1-phosphate and ceramide 1-phosphate revealed important new insights into their tissue distribution and changes during co-infection.
Article I describes the IAV-specific oxylipin changes in the pig (german landrace) as infection model. Therefore, the sample types lung, spleen, blood plasma, and bronchoalveolar lavage from infected animals at different time points after infection were analyzed and compared with samples from uninfected pigs. Mainly in the lung and the spleen, increased amounts of certain lipid mediators were observed. These changes coincide well with already described alterations in humans and mice. Furthermore, the analysis of different sample material provided an overview about appropriate sample types. Surprisingly, many perturbations were detected in the spleen, which itself was uninfected. Based on the local reaction of lipid mediators, most studies concentrate on sample material with close contact to side of infection. Therefore, this dissertation reveals new insights into a form of systemic immune response. Besides the use of animals with a complex immune system for infection experiments, human bronchial epithelial cells (16HBE) were mono- and co-infected with the pathogens S. aureus, S. pneumoniae and IAV as described in article II. Such cells are the initial barrier for and first contact site with pathogens and thus the comprehension of this host-pathogen interaction is of essential importance. Most changes were detected during pneumococcal infection. Furthermore, the analyzed infections with bacterial pathogens differed from IAV infection by an increased synthesis of 5-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (HETE). For further infections with the above mentioned pathogens, the mouse was used as an infection model. Besides infections affecting the respiratory tract, also the impact of an S. pyogenes infection in different mice strains was analyzed and described in article III. Infection-related changes in prostaglandins, which are involved in bone turnover in swollen pawns as well as enhanced amounts of sepsis- and arthritis-associated lipid mediators were detected, in case arthritis had been induced prior to infection. Furthermore, increased amounts of 20-HETE could be observed for such severe infections. An enhanced biosynthesis of 20-HETE was further confirmed in a high-pathogenic S. aureus LUG2012 infection in article IV for all examined sample types. In this last article of this dissertation, bacterial and viral infections in mice were analyzed similar to those described in article II. Mainly IAV-specific lipid mediator alterations were detected, which are in accordance with the findings of the infected pigs. The additional MALDI-MS-Imaging measurements revealed so far unknown accumulation of ceramide 1-phosphate in lung and spleen as well as enrichment in the red pulp of the spleen.
In summary, this dissertation provides substantial lipid mediator profiles for infections in three different model systems with selected bacterial and viral pathogens. The obtained data constitute a suitable basis for continuative research projects, in which the influence of single bioactive lipids on the course of infection could be examined in more detail.
On the aqueous phase chemistry of atmospheric-pressure plasma jets for biomedical applications
(2021)
Cold atmospheric-pressure plasmas are candidate biomedical tools proposed for various applications, such as biological decontamination, cancer regression, and promotion of wound healing. Plasmas, which are in the fourth state of matter, can be generated using inert gases (e.g., argon, helium, ambient air) and different source concepts. Together with the applied parameters, the source design defines the chemical-physical characteristics of the resulting plasma, leading in turn to variable biochemical effects on biological matter. The medical effectiveness of cold plasmas has been proven in vitro and in vivo, also in clinical trials for wound healing in patients using two certified plasmas sources, the kINPen MED and the PlasmaDerm. However, molecular mechanisms leading to those effects are unclear. In the same way, it must be studied if the modulation of plasma properties could improve the specificity of biological effects. These findings are needed to define the concept of plasma dose to be optimized in targeting peculiar pathologic conditions. The present thesis consisting of five peer-reviewed publications has investigated these aspects of plasma research.
In the gaseous phase of cold plasmas, various components with biological activity are produced, such as radiation (e.g., vacuum UV, UV) and reactive species (e.g., •O, 1O2, •OH, •NO, •NO2, O3). As most gaseous species are short-lived, liquid compartments surrounding cells and molecular structures could mediate their transformation and/or the production of other aqueous species. For this reason, plasma-induced aqueous chemistry has been mainly investigated in this thesis. The reaction pathways of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species in liquid were analyzed by monitoring the oxidative modifications induced on tyrosine and cysteine, which are biological structures essential in cellular protein functioning. Liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry-based strategies have been elaborated to elucidate structural changes and characterize the oxidative pattern occurring on the tracers after treatment with plasmas.
As a first result, it could be shown that the oxidative pattern induced on tyrosine or cysteine variated qualitatively and quantitatively with the applied conditions, reflecting the action of differently produced/deposited species in liquid. Biologically relevant structures were identified and in part quantified (e.g., cystine, sulfonic acid, sulfinic acid, S-sulfonate, S-nitrosocysteine, nitrotyrosine, nitrosotyrosine). By using isotopically labeled oxygen or nitrogen in the gas plasma, or labeled oxygen in the target liquid, the incorporation of gaseous or aqueous species in the tracer’s structures was monitored via mass spectrometry. With this strategy, the reaction mechanisms involving gaseous oxygen and nitrogen species at the liquid interface were clarified, as well as the de novo production of reactive species in liquid. Short-lived gaseous oxygen species such as atomic and singlet oxygen (•O, 1O2), predominantly formed in conditions with oxygen in the plasma gas, were able to modify the cysteine structures in highly oxidized derivatives, such as cysteine sulfonic acid. Due to their half-life, however, their activity occurred mainly at the interface. Vacuum UV radiation and •O also led to the formation in liquid of hydroxyl radicals (•OH) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), due to water photolysis and homolysis. Water-derived species were responsible for the formation of reversible modifications, such as cysteine S-sulfonate, cystine, and cystine sulfoxides. Nitrosative modifications (e.g., S-nitrosocysteine, nitrosotyrosine, nitrotyrosine) could be observed only in conditions with both nitrogen and oxygen in the plasma gas, and further optimization occurred in presence of water molecules in the gas. In this case, the formation and action of peroxynitrite (ONOO-) in generating nitrotyrosine was proven by using a scavenger molecule for ONOO-.
Finally, the cysteine product pattern was applied as a tool to characterize and compare the overall chemistry generated in liquid by different plasma sources and applied parameters. These findings aim to support and contribute to the definition of plasma dose for plasma medicine, through the standardization, control, tuning, and optimization of plasma parameters and plasma liquid chemistry. These results may be applied in the future to improve the specificity and selectivity of the biological effects generated by the described atmospheric-pressure plasma jets.
Blood platelets are primary major players in the coagulation cascade, that act upon damage in blood vessels at the subendothelial surface. During this process, platelets change their shape, release granules and aggregate by cross-linking of integrin αIIbβ3 via fibrinogen. The heterodimeric transmembrane receptor integrin αIIbβ3 is highly expressed on platelets and its regulation is bidirectional. Inside-out signaling leads to increased affinity for ligands due to dramatic rearrangements in the integrin conformation changing from an inactive bent conformation to an extended, high-affinity conformation. The swing-out motion of the integrin head domain enables binding of ligands, e.g. fibrinogen, resulting in outside-in signaling guiding kinase activation, shape change, platelet aggregation and spreading, subsequently.
Agonists (e.g. thrombin) and other triggers (e.g. shear stress) promote the activity of platelets, making the study of specific proteins delicate. Therefore, this PhD thesis describes a biomimetic system used to study αIIbβ3 membrane receptors. Integrin αIIbβ3 was successfully reconstituted into liposomes and characterized by biophysical and molecular biological methods (e.g. dynamic light scattering, transmission electron microscopy, circular dichroism spectroscopy and flow cytometry). The fusion of liposomes to a solid substrate allows the analysis of potential activation triggers and interaction partners concerning their role in integrin αIIbβ3 activation in a lipid bilayer. Among others, quartz-crystal microbalance measurements show that divalent ions and clinically relevant drugs (e.g. unfractionated heparin and quinine), known to be involved in immune thrombocytopenia (ITP), are certainly candidates which induce integrin activation and minor changes in protein secondary structure. In addition, protein corona formation during contact of nanoparticles with blood components, such as fibrinogen, as well as their interaction with artificial platelet model membranes containing integrins were studied. Moreover, lipid environment can be strongly controlled as integrin activation is dependent on the ratio of liquid-ordered and disordered phases within the membrane. Eventually, by exclusion of disturbances of complex external and internal factors, the established system enables the interaction analysis of various substances with receptors under physiological conditions. In contrast, these disturbances are required to understand the complex machinery of cellular processes in vivo. Hence, an expression platform, on the basis of HEK293 cells, was established to study not only the interaction of integrin αIIbβ3 with cytoskeletal networks, but also the impact of mutations on integrin resulting in a disease-like phenotype. Mutations known to induce Glanzmann thrombasthenia (GT) symptoms, were introduced and led to different mechanical properties of integrin-expressing cells, especially during cell adhesion cells. Thereby, generation of biological and medically-relevant processes combined with the biophysical setup contribute to understand disease mechanisms as well as the action of therapeutic agents in diseases such as GT and ITP.
The aims of this thesis were the identification and development of whole-cell biocatalysts for the regio- and stereoselective hydroxylation of steroids, including hormones and bile acids by P450 monooxygenases. Steroids and their derivatives are applied as therapeutic agents. The chemical synthesis of such compounds depends on multi-step procedures, in a stereo- and regiospecific manner involving the protection and deprotection of functional groups and toxic reagents and intermediates. In this thesis, different P450 monooxygenases were investigated as ‘bio-based’ alternatives to chemical catalysts for the late-stage functionalization of steroids and bile acids and engineered by directed evolution procedures towards desired transformation activities. In Article I, the 16α-hydroxylation activity of the bovine CYP17A1 was enhanced by protein engineering to improve the transformation of progesterone into 16α-hydroxyprogesterone in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Article II follows the same line of research and targets the selective synthesis of bile acid derivatives in Escherichia coli (E. coli) whole-cells. The P450 monooxygenase CYP107D1 (OleP) from Streptomyces antibioticus (S. antibioticus) was identified, which selectively hydroxylates bile acids like lithocholic acid (LCA) and deoxycholic acid (DCA) at the 6β-position, yielding murideoxycholic acid (MDCA), a gallstone solubilizing agent, and 3α-,6β-,12α-trihydroxy-5β-cholan-24-oic acid, respectively. The utilization of OleP as catalyst resulted in shorter synthesis routes for both compounds and additional in a higher yield for MDCA. Building on the results of Article II and the protein engineering approach from Article I, Article III deals with the switch of regioselectivity of the identified CYP107D1 from 6β- to 7β-hydroxylation to form the therapeutic agent ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) from LCA by direct hydroxylation. Following a rational protein engineering strategy, a variant with nearly perfect selectivity for UDCA formation was found. Until today, UDCA is either isolated from bile of catheterised farmed bears or produced semisynthetically through low-yielding multistep reactions starting from cholic acid (CA). Article III presents the first reported enzyme for the direct 7β-hydroxylation of LCA to UDCA.
S-adenosyl-L-methionine- (SAM) dependent methyltransferases (MTs) catalyse methylation of halide ions and the C, O, N, S, Se, and As atoms of biomolecules ranging from biopolymers to small molecules. They display different chemo-, regio- and stereoselectivity according to their specific functions. This thesis focuses on the engineering of O-methyltransferases (OMTs) and halide methyltransferases (HMTs) through rational design and directed evolution to study their structure-function relationship and to explore their catalytic promiscuity. The influence of substrate binding residues on the substrate scope and regioselectivity of a plant OMT against various phenolic substrates (Article I) and flavonoids (Article II) has been investigated. Article III describes the directed evolution of an HMT for the biocatalytic synthesis of diverse SAM analogues. With the evolved HMT, regioselective alkylation of phenolic compounds and flavonoids, as well as the SAM analogue regeneration, were achieved through an HMT-MT cascade reaction.
Article I Specific residues expand the substrate scope and enhance the regioselectivity of a plant O-methyltransferase.
It was reported in literature that an isoeugenol 4-OMT (IeOMT) can be engineered to a caffeic acid 3-OMT (CaOMT) by replacing three consecutive residues. In this article, we investigated the effect of these residues on substrate preference and regioselectivity of IeOMT. The triple mutant T133M/A134N/T135Q and the respective single mutants were constructed and tested against a series of phenolic compounds. The variant T133M had a universal effect to improve enzymatic activities against all tested substrates while the mutant A134N had enhanced regioselectivity. The triple mutant T133M/A134N/T135Q benefits from these two mutations, which not only expanded the substrate scope, but also enhanced the regioselectivity of IeOMT. On the basis of this work, regiospecific methylated phenolics can be produced in high purity by different IeOMT variants.
Article II Influence of substrate binding residues on the substrate scope and regioselectivity of a plant O-methyltransferase against flavonoids
Flavonoid OMTs (FOMTs), isoflavonoid OMTs (IOMTs) and phenylpropanoid OMTs (POMTs) display different substrate preferences. Sequence comparison showed that the substrate binding residues at positions 322 and 326 are different between these OMT groups and might be critical for the substrate discrimination. Residues at positions 322 and 326 in IeOMT (a POMT) were mutated to the commonly presented residues in FOMT and IOMT. The introduced mutants, in cooperation with the variant T133M, have improved or brought novel activities and regioselectivity against the tested flavonoids eriodictyol, naringenin, luteolin, quercetin, and also the isoflavonoid genistein compared to the wild-type IeOMT. On the basis of this work, methylated flavonoids that are rare in nature were produced in high purity.
Article III Directed evolution of a halide methyltransferase enables biocatalytic synthesis of diverse SAM analogs
Biocatalytic alkylations to obtain chemo‐, regio‐ and stereoselectively alkylated compounds can be achieved by MTs with the supply of SAM analogues. It was recently discovered that SAM can be directly synthesized from S adenosyl-L homocysteine (SAH) and methyl iodide, catalysed by an HMT. To explore the promiscuity of HMT in the synthesis of SAM analogues, we performed directed evolution of the Arabidopsis thaliana HMT based on a sensitive, colorimetric iodide assay. The identified variant V140T displayed activities against ethyl‐, propyl‐, and allyl iodides to produce the corresponding SAM analogues. With this HMT variant, regioselective ethylation of luteolin and allylation of 3,4‐dihydroxybenzaldehyde, as well as the SAM analogue regeneration, were achieved through this HMT-MT one-pot cascade reaction.
G-quadruplexes (G4s) have been in the focus of research in the last decades for their regulatory roles in vivo and for their use in nano- and biotechnology. However, an understanding of the various factors that drive a particular quadruplex fold remains limited, challenging rational therapeutic targeting and design of these tetrahelical structures. In this regard, insights from modified G-quadruplexes may help to deepen our knowledge of G-quadruplex structure. In this dissertation, sugar-modified guanosine analogs are exploited for their altered conformational preferences regarding both glycosidic bond angle and sugar pucker by their incorporation into different syn positions of the G-core of a model G-quadruplex. Induced structural perturbations as characterized by NMR spectroscopy range from a local change in tetrad polarity to a complete refolding into an unusual structure with a V-shaped loop, a unique G4 structural element in the focus of this work. Detailed conformational analysis of the introduced G analogs and high-resolution structures of the modified quadruplexes reveal a complex interplay of glycosidic torsion angle, sugar pucker preferences and local interactions, which may all play a leading role in driving G4 folding.
In modern-day organic synthesis, transitional metal catalysis has become an essential tool-kit to access the biologically significant complex organic scaffolds. The activation profile of these sophisticated catalytic systems in cross-coupling chemistry and ring-closing processes has been well appreciated and frequently employed by the scientific community.
The present thesis is describing the results of interdisciplinary research involving medicinal chemistry and transitional metal homogeneous catalysis. A molybdenum mediated process was employed to access 32 unprecedented heterocyclic fused poly sulfur ring containing pentathiepins in moderate to good yields as a part of medicinal chemistry. Biologically significant, such as quinoxaline, pyrazine, pyridine, nicotinamide, quinoline, imdazo-pyrazine, pyrrolo-pyrazine, purine, and pyridine sulfonamide scaffolds were functionalized with pentathiepin unit via multi-step organic synthesis. Essentially, the Sonogashira cross-coupling and(Et4N)2[MoO(S4)2] mediated ring-closing steps were commonly employed in all pentathiepin syntheses. The analytically pure samples were characterized by 1H, 13C, 19F-NMR, FTIR, ESI-MS, CHNS, and X-ray single-crystal diffraction analysis. Notably, all pentathiepins exhibited an ABX3 multiplet pattern between δ: 4.2-4.5 ppm with the integration of 2H for the ethoxy functional group's methylene protons substituted on the five-membered ring of pentathiepin, which was later considered as a fingerprint for pentathiepin formation. The mechanistic investigations via control experiments suggest that the tetra sulfur ring Mo(IV) precursor (Et4N)2[MoO(S4)2] is vital along with elemental sulfur for the pentathiepin formation, and the Mo(IV) complex regenerates in the reaction. Furthermore, For the first time, the GPx1 enzyme inhibitor properties of novel fused heterocyclic pentathiepins were established, where these probes exhibited 9-12 folds higher potency than mercaptosuccinic acid. Notably, <1 µM concentration of quinoxaline, pyrazine, and quinoline fused pentathiepins were potent enough to inhibit 50% of GPx1 enzyme activity. Additionally, cytotoxicity, antimicrobial and antifungal studies were conducted for all pentathiepins. In anticancer investigations, the IC50 concentrations for all pentathiepins were ranging between 0.22 to 4.7 µM.
The second half of the thesis introduces a novel water-soluble Pd/PTABS as a potent catalyst for C-X (X = N, O, and S) cross-coupling chloroheteroarenes and halonucleosides. The novel, mild and efficient Pd/PTABS catalytic system was successfully employed at low catalytic loadings (1 mol%) for the amination (C−N), etherification (C−O), and thioetherification (C−S) of chloroheteroarenes at ambient to moderate temperatures. The Pd/PTABS catalyst is well-tolerating various heterocyclic scaffolds, and under the optimized catalytic conditions, various secondary amines, electron-rich or electron-poor phenols, thiophenols, and alkylthiols, were efficiently employed as nucleophilic coupling partners. Notably, the catalyst offered tremendous regio and chemoselectivity with excellent temperature control. Besides, novel sulfones and sulfoximines were prepared from the thioethers obtained via Pd/PTABS. The catalyst was employed efficiently for synthesizing biologically significant known drugs or drug candidates such as alogliptin (anti-diabetic agent), XRK 469 (antitumor agent), and Imuran-Azathioprine (immunosuppressive) in competitive yields. Preliminary DFT investigations were performed, and based on the DFT analysis, the electropositive character of the phosphorous atom in quaternary ammonium salts of PTABS supports the heteroatom directed C−Cl activation hypothesis.
In 2010, the identification of 17 novel (R)-ATAs represented a breakthrough for the biocatalytic asymmetric synthesis of chiral amines, because only one (R)-ATA was described before. These novel ATAs were identified in a bioinformatic approach by studying the substrate acceptance of BCATs and DATAs to deduce the unknown substrate coordination of (R)-ATAs. Article I describes an alternative approach for the identification of (R)-ATA activity by reengineering the substrate- recognition site of α-AATs. While the engineering of the eBCAT led to the formation of an initial (R)-amine acceptance only, the (R)-ATA activity was successfully introduced in the DATA scaffold. These results demonstrate the transformation of an α-AAT in a moderately active (R)-ATA for the first time and highlight the evolutionary relationship between α-AATs and ATAs. Despite the availability of different ATAs nowadays, their substrate spectrum is limited due to the natural composition of their active sites. Several protein-engineering studies showed the widening of the substrate spectrum and the acceptance of bulky substrates by screening large mutant libraries to identify beneficial variants. In Article II, we developed an in silico engineering approach for amine transaminases to improve the conversion of bulky substrates and to reduce the number of variants to be tested in the laboratory. The resulting double-mutants of the (S)-ATA from C. violaceum displayed a >200-fold improved activity towards the bulky benchmark substrate. These variants expand the available biocatalytic toolbox for the synthesis of bulky amines, and the developed framework paves the way for rational protein-engineering protocols.
By studying unconventional transaminase substrates, we explored the potential of the available in- house transaminase toolbox in Articles III, IV, V, and VI. In Article III, we showed the transamination of a β-keto ester, leading to the synthesis of β-phenylalanine. The described cascade in Article IV enables the synthesis of amino carbohydrates. In addition, Article V describes an enzymatic cascade for the synthesis of amino fatty acids, which was extended in Article VI to obtain fatty amines.
The findings of this thesis clearly contribute to the understanding of the substrate scope and specificity of amine transaminases and expand the application of this versatile biocatalyst beyond classical ketone substrates.
In this doctoral thesis, algorithms are presented that are designed for the investigation in the mesopause region between the upper Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere (MLT). The photochemical models are proposed and applied to represent the oxygen airglow and the oxygen photochemistry in the MLT. Atomic oxygen, O, in the ground state, O(3P), is of special interest because it is a reactive trace gas actively contributing to the Earth’s airglow. The retrievals of O(3P) concentrations, [O(3P)], are based on the nightglow time series of the green line emission measured remotely as in the first part of this thesis and the individual profiles of multiple nightglow emissions of O and molecular oxygen (O2) measured in situ as in the second part of this thesis. To process the complete spectral time series measured by using the satellite-borne instrument SCIAMACHY (SCanning Imaging Absorption spectroMeter for Atmospheric CHartographY), an intricate set of algorithms is developed and applied with the regularized total least squares minimization approach to estimate a set of the optimal regularization parameters and to retrieve a corresponding set of vertical Volume Emission Rate (VER) profiles. Furthermore, these algorithms take emissions of another origin and the Earth's shape into account. Considering not identified states of O2, the established photochemical models are adjusted resulting in two model modifications. Both model modifications are employed to retrieve the [O(3P)] time series on the basis of the VER time series in the MLT. The model input parameters vary in the atmosphere that motivated to propose these two model modifications and to employ available sources of the input parameters. One semi-empirical model, one general circulation model and the satellite-borne instrument SABER (Sounding of the Atmosphere using Broadband Emission Radiometry) are employed as sources of the reference [O(3P)] and input parameters time series. The SABER instrument employed as a source of the input parameters is preferred according to the comparison of the retrieved and reference [O(3P)] time series. Studying the impact of the 11-year solar cycle on O(3P) in the MLT, an algorithm is developed and applied with the Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm to estimate the optimal fit parameters step-wise. The results of the O(3P) sensitivity analysis obtained with respect to the solar activity forcing at the 11 year and 27 day time scales and the lunar gravitational forcing agree with the reference model simulations. The hypothesis regarding vertical shifts between different of Meinel bands at least partly caused by the hydroxyl radical (OH*) quenching with O(3P) is confirmed experimentally. Based on the conclusion drawn in the first part of this thesis that the data sets’ self-consistency is high as for the averaged SABER and SCIAMACHY measurements, a comprehensive set of available data with a higher level of the data sets’ self-consistency is employed in the second part of this thesis. Multiple airglow emissions measured in situ during four campaigns are employed to propose the Multiple Airglow Chemistry (MAC) model. Processed emissions are the Herzberg I, Chamberlain, Atmospheric and Infrared Atmospheric band emissions of O2 and the green line emission of O. Considering all widely known and additionally complemented reactions, the MAC model is proposed to represent the oxygen airglow and the oxygen photochemistry in the MLT. The presented MAC model is based on the hypothesis of Slanger et al. (2004) stating that higher excited states of O2 are coupled with each other through vibronic de-excitation caused by collisions among molecules of this group of O2 states in the MLT. This hypothesis is modified excluding the singlet Herzberg state of O2 from the group of O2 states considered by Slanger et al. (2004). The MAC calculations are carried out sequentially starting with higher excited O2 states to provide the retrieved output concentrations of these O2 states as the input concentrations to the next calculation steps. The final step is only based on concentrations of all species, whereas each of the earlier steps is based on a corresponding VER profile besides of the input concentrations. The oxygen photochemistry in the MLT is represented by all species considered at the final step that makes it possible to adopt the MAC reactions in a general circulation model. Four modifications of the MAC model, i.e. including or excluding the triplet Herzberg states of O2 and including or excluding ozone and odd hydrogen (hydrogen, OH* and hydroperoxy radical), lead to negligible differences in the retrieved [O(3P)] profiles. Based on the MAC calculations verified and validated on the basis of the four rocket campaigns, one of the effective modifications of the MAC model (excluding the triplet Herzberg states of O2, ozone and odd hydrogen) is further reduced to the most effective modification. This implies that for the [O(3P)] retrieval only the O2 Atmospheric band emission, temperature and concentrations of molecular nitrogen (N2) and O2 are sufficient to apply. Calculations carried out by using the most effective modification of the MAC model are verified and validated on the basis of self-consistent in situ measurements obtained simultaneously. The MAC model enables identifying precursors of (1) the three lowest O2 valence states and (2) the second excited O state responsible for (1) the Atmospheric and Infrared Atmospheric band emissions of O2 and (2) the green line emission of O, respectively. Particularly, the singlet Herzberg state of O2 is identified as the major precursor of the second excited O state resulting in the green line emission. In focus of potential further research is an extension of the MAC model with vibrationally excited states of O2 and ionized species.
From a biopharmaceutical point of view, poor oral bioavailability of a drug is one of the greatest challenges for formulation scientists. The majority of new chemical entities (NCEs) are weakly basic drugs. Consequently, these drugs exhibit pH-dependent solubility, being higher under acidic conditions in the fasted stomach and lower under neutral conditions in the small intestine, the main site of drug absorption. For theses compounds, pH-dependent precipitation testing represents a key parameter during early development stages. In this development phase, the amount of drug available is limited, and fast and detailed investigations of simulated drug solubility are desired. Therefore, an automated small-scale in vitro transfer model, simulating drug transfer from a donor (stomach; simulated gastric fluid, SGF pH 2.0) to an acceptor (small intestine; fasted state simulated intestinal fluid, FaSSIF-phosphate pH 6.5) compartment, has been developed. In contrast to the originally published transfer model, this model allowed a detailed investigation of drug supersaturation and precipitation in a small-scale, feasible for pre-formulation purposes, through miniaturization and automation in an in-line analytical set-up. In-line drug concentration analysis in turbid samples, due to pH-dependent drug precipitation, was achieved by a pre-filtration step, the use of flow-through cuvettes and the application of UV derivative spectroscopy. Compared to the common procedure of manual sampling followed by HPLC-UV analysis for concentration determination, the supersaturation and precipitation of the model drug ketoconazole was more accurately captured by the newly developed in-line analytical set-up. In addition, the newly developed small-scale model was compared to a USP II-based transfer model, representing an established scale of the transfer model. Using a physiologically relevant simulated gastric emptying rate of 5 min half-time, supersaturation and precipitation of the model drugs ketoconazole and a new chemical entity from the research laboratories of Merck Healthcare KGaA, MSC-A, were observed to be highly comparable. Following miniaturization and automation, the developed small-scale model was used to establish eight physiologically relevant test-sets. These test-sets were used to assess the impact of gastrointestinal (GI) variability, i.e. gastric pH, gastric emptying, and GI fluid volumes, on supersaturation and precipitation of two weakly basic model compounds, ketoconazole and MSC-A. The experiments revealed that variations in all GI parameters investigated affected the in vitro supersaturation and precipitation of ketoconazole. For example, faster gastric emptying yielded higher supersaturation and faster precipitation of ketoconazole. In contrast, MSC-A supersaturation and precipitation was only affected by variability in gastric pH. Consequently, the effect of varying GI parameters was found to be drug-specific. Elevated gastric pH, as it can result from co-medication with acid-reducing drugs, resulted in lower degrees of supersaturation for both substances. For ketoconazole, this result is in agreement with the observation that the oral bioavailability of ketoconazole is lowered when proton pump inhibitors are co-administered. In addition to the physiological considerations, the small-scale model developed herein was used to establish an in vitro screening assay for precipitation inhibitors (PIs). The use of PIs represents one option of reducing the process of pH-dependent drug precipitation during simulated GI transfer. For this purpose, ketoconazole and five orally administered kinase inhibitors (i.e. pazopanib, gefitinib, lapatinib, vemurafenib, and MSC-A) were analyzed with and without the polymeric PIs HPMC, HPMCAS, PVPK17 and K30, PEG6000, and Soluplus® in the small-scale transfer model. This screening revealed that at least one effective PI could be identified for each model drug. Moreover, HPMCAS and Soluplus® were the most effective PIs. Another outcome of these studies was that gefitinib expressed highly variable amorphous precipitation which was confirmed by powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD). During the transfer model experiments, the intermediate amorphous and supersaturated state of gefitinib was stabilized using HPMCAS and Soluplus®. After the polymer investigations, the impact of the buffer species in the simulated intestinal medium on drug supersaturation and precipitation was assessed. Since luminal fluids are mainly buffered by hydrogen carbonate ions, a USP II-based transfer model equipped with the pHysio-grad® device was proposed. This allowed the use of a complex bicarbonate buffer for the preparation of FaSSIF-bicarbonate in an in vitro transfer model. Results of transfer model experiments using standard phosphate-based FaSSIF and a more physiologically relevant bicarbonate-based FaSSIF were compared. Therefore, ketoconazole, pazopanib, and lapatinib were analyzed with and without the precipitation inhibitor HPMCAS. While HPMCAS was found to be an effective precipitation inhibitor for all drugs in FaSSIF-phosphate, the effect in FaSSIF-bicarbonate was much less pronounced. Additionally, performed rat PK studies revealed that HPMCAS did not increase the exposure of any of the model compounds significantly, indicating that the transfer model employing bicarbonate-buffered FaSSIF was more predictive compared to the model using phosphate-buffered FaSSIF. The in vitro and in vivo results of these studies demonstrated that the supersaturation precipitation of poorly soluble weakly basic drugs can be significantly affected by GI variability. Furthermore, the use of the automated small-scale transfer model enabled the identification of effective precipitation inhibitors for the model drugs involved in these studies. At the same time the buffer species has been observed to be especially important to reliably predict the in vivo solubility/dissolution behavior of HPMCAS and the weakly basic model drugs.
Understanding the fundamental mechanisms in the extracellular matrix of cells (ECM) is crucial for the development of drugs and biomaterials. Therefore, an atomistic model of the extracellular matrix is a cost-efficient way to observe influences of drugs, test the effect of mutations or misfolds in proteins or study the properties of fibril or network-forming peptides.
With this thesis, a refined molecular model of an adhesion complex is proposed that contains collagen, fibronectin and the cell receptor integrin. During the building of the model, major new insights are given for each of these proteins and a powerful protein-folding algorithm is
developed.
The term diabetes mellitus comprises a group of metabolic diseases all distinguished by their main characteristic hyperglycaemia. With a steadily increasing prevalence diabetes displays an enormous burden for patients and health systems and is therefore of special interest for research. The development of the two main types of diabetes, type 1 and type 2, is closely linked to the formation of reactive species, especially hydrogen peroxide, inside different compartments of pancreatic beta cells. However, these cells are especially vulnerable towards oxidative stress mediated by hydrogen peroxide due to a low expression of antioxidative enzymes.
The main aims of the present thesis were to analyse the intracellular generation and to enable the site-specific detection of hydrogen peroxide to evaluate its role in the delicate equilibrium between redox signalling and oxidative stress under certain pathophysiological conditions, and moreover to monitor its movement through compartments and subcellular membranes of insulin-producing cells. Additionally, a new methodology for an artificial site-specific generation of hydrogen peroxide inside living cells was developed.
Central to this thesis are so-called G-quadruplex (G4) nucleic acids. These unusual structures have recently moved into the scientific limelight - mostly due to their prevalence in the human genome. Incidentally, the vast majority of G4-prone sequences is found in telomeric regions and in the promoter sequences of a large number of cancer-related genes.
Furthermore, recent studies suggest a wide applicability of these structures as therapeutic and functional agents, though the technology is still in its infancy with only a few oligonucleotides in clinical trials. Notably, G-quadruplexes are highly polymorphous, exhibiting different topologies and conformations based on sequence, solution condition and molecularity. Therefore, rational design of such structures with specific, topology-encoded functions demands a comprehensive understanding of the underlying folding parameters.
As the folding process is the result of a whole orchestra of parameters with synergistic effects, the herein proposed approach to understand the G4 structural arrangement concentrates on native G4-forming sequences with well-defined topologies. Perturbations of these structures by rational nucleotide substitutions allow for the observation of discrete effects on the folding pathway and on the resulting overall topology.
The method chosen for primary investigation in the following studies on G4 architectures was Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) as it is the most powerful tool for structure elucidation in liquids. Unique to this technique, it permits the observation of discrete species in mixtures by distinct perturbations at the atomic level as well as valuable insights into the molecular dynamics.
The included publications study the effects of site-specific bromine substitutions on native quadruplex scaffolds, thereby successfully inducing new structures. These expand the G4 structural landscape but also enhance our understanding of the driving forces in G4 folding.
The synthesis of pterin-dithiolene ligands was achieved by employing the radical nucleophilic substitution, i.e. the so-called “Minisci- Reaction”1. This protocol was used for the first time by Professor W. Pfleiderer on pterin substrates2 and proved a powerful method for the preparation of 6 acyl-pterins in course of this work. Subsequent construction of the dithiolene ring facilitates the synthesis of pterin-dithiolene ligands with completely unprotected pterin moieti.
The molybdenum cofactor is probably one of the most relevant discoveries in the recent history of pterin chemistry and biochemistry. Many efforts have been made for the preparation of compounds able to mimic the features of the Moco ligand system called "Molybdopterin". In fact, the study of MPT models enables a deeper understanding of the “mechanism of function” of this cofactor and most importantly, lays the foundation for a potential treatment for the Moco related diseases MoCOD and iSOD.
The goal of this thesis was to characterize the properties of tetramyristoyl cardiolipin (TMCL) and several environmental influences on it. This included investigating the pH and temperature dependency of TMCL as well as the influences of ROS on TMCL and exam-ining the lipid-protein interactions between TMCL and cytc. Furthermore, I extended the research to the analysis of binary mixtures composed of TMCL and dimyristoyl phosphati-dylcholine (DMPC). To this end, I investigated the samples with the aid of the Langmuir monolayer technique. This method allowed me to mimic interactions occurring at the membrane surface as it represents one membrane layer. The recording of π-A isotherms was also coupled with further other techniques like Brewster angle microscopy (BAM), Infrared Reflection-Absorption Spectroscopy (IRRAS), Grazing Incidence X-Ray Diffraction (GIXD) and Total Reflection X-Ray Fluorescence (TRXF) to enable a more comprehensive monolayer study. In addition, some systems were analyzed using Thin-layer Chromatography (TLC) and/or Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) to be able to draw conclusions about sample composition or characteristic temperatures, respectively.
Amine transaminases are versatile biocatalysts for the production of pharmaceutically and agrochemically relevant chiral amines. They represent an environmentally benign alternative to waste intensive transition metal catalysed synthesis strategies, especially because of their high stereoselectivity and robustness. Therefore, they have been frequently used in the (chemo)enzymatic synthesis of amines and/or became attractive targets for enzyme engineering especially in the last decade, mainly in order to enlarge their substrate scope. Certainly, one of the most notable examples of amine transaminase engineering is the
manufacturing of the anti-diabetic drug Sitagliptin in large scale after several rounds of protein engineering. Thereby, the target amine was produced in asymmetric synthesis mode which is the most convenient and favored route to a target chiral amine, starting from the corresponding ketone. The choice of the amine donor is highly relevant for reaction design in terms of economical and thermodynamic considerations. For instance, the use of alanine as the natural amine donor is one of the most common strategies for the amination of target ketones but needs the involvement of auxiliary enzymes to shift the reaction equilibrium towards product formation. In fact, isopropylamine is probably one of the most favored donor molecules since it is cheap and achiral but it is supposed to be accepted only by a limited number of amine transaminases.
This thesis focusses on the optimization and application of amine transaminases for asymmetric synthesis reactions en route to novel target chiral amines using isopropylamine as the preferred amine donor.
The present work is a cumulative dissertation that covers the research work of the author at the Department of Analytical and Physical Chemistry of Chelyabinsk State University. It contains a short description of the study and a set of attached publications in peer-reviewed journals and conference proceedings.
The phase and chemical equilibria in binary systems Me – Si
(where Me is the 4th-period transition metal) as well as Mo – Si, Mn – Ge and Fe – Ge at low temperatures were considered. The solid solubility of silicon in vanadium, chromium, manganese, iron, nickel, cobalt and copper and that of germanium in manganese and iron was estimated.
The phase equilibria in Me – Si – O, Mo – Si – O, Mn – Ge – O and Fe – Ge – O ternary systems at standard conditions were considered from a thermodynamic viewpoint. The atmospheric corrosion of transition metals silicides and manganese and iron germanides was discussed.
The chemical and electrochemical equilibria in Me – Si – H2O, Mo – Si – H2O, Mn – Ge – H2O and Fe – Ge – H2O systems were considered from a thermodynamic viewpoint. Pourbaix diagrams for some 4th-period transition metals and molybdenum, as well as for silicon, were revised. The potential – pH diagrams for Me – Si – H2O, Mo – Si – H2O, Mn – Ge – H2O and Fe – Ge – H2O systems were plotted in the first time. The corrosion-electrochemical behaviour of transition metals silicides and manganese and iron germanides in aqueous media was discussed.
The potential – pH diagrams for some siliceous brasses and bronzes (which are multicomponent alloys containing both transition metals and silicon) were plotted, and the corrosion of these alloys in aqueous media was discussed.
Method of estimation of corrosion-electrochemical behaviour of multicomponent alloys, which takes into account both thermodynamic and kinetic data and is based on mutual construction of equilibrium and polarisation potential – pH diagrams, was described. Its usage was illustrated in the example of the structural steel 20KT.
In an aerobic environment the occurrence of reactive oxygen species (ROS) is a common phenomenon. The diverse roles of ROS in cellular function and in diseases make them a target of interest in many research areas. Substances capable of directly or indirectly reducing the (harmful) effects of ROS are referred to as “antioxidants”. However, the term is applied miscellaneously in the chemical and the biological context to describe different attributes of a substance. In this work the potential of an electrochemical assay to detect different ROS in-vitro was explored. The method was optimized to investigate the radical scavenging activities (antioxidant potential) of trolox and different plant compounds (ascorbic acid, caffeic acid, epigallocatechin gallate, ferulic acid, kaempferol, quercetin, rutin, and Gynostemma pentaphyllum extract) in-vitro. The obtained data was compared to established antioxidant in-vitro assays. Further, the impact of the plant substances on cellular parameters was evaluated with the electrochemical assay and established cell assays.
The optimization of the electrochemical assay allowed the reproducible detection of ROS. The sensor electrode proved differently sensitive towards individual ROS species. The highest sensitivity was recorded for hydroxyl radicals while superoxide and hydrogen peroxide had little impact on the sensor. Extracellular ROS concentrations could be detected from cell lines releasing elevated ROS into the extracellular space. The antioxidant activity of the investigated plant substances could be demonstrated with all in-vitro assays applied. However, the absolute as well as the relative activity of the individual substances varied depending on the experimental parameters of the assays (pH, radical species, phase, detection method).
The plant compounds modified redox related intracellular parameters in different cell lines. However, a direct correlation between intracellular and extracellular effects of the plant compounds could not be established.
The work demonstrates the feasibility to use the electrochemical assay to sense ROS as well as to evaluate the radical scavenging activity of molecules. The in-vitro antioxidant activities demonstrated for the individual plant substances are not reliable to predict the cellular effects of the molecules.
In this work, the regioselectivity of different Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenases (BVMOs) for the conversion of selected substrates was reversed or improved by protein engineering. These studies highlight the importance of substrate positioning for the regioselectivity and that the position of the substrate can be efficiently influenced by introducing proper mutations. It was shown that the beneficial mutations for all BVMOs were partly in corresponding positions. Additionally, the sulfoxidation activity and the stability of BVMOs were targeted and improved by applying protein engineering.
The overarching goal of this work was to develop a biosensor based on functional nucleic acids. The biosensor should be modular, such that by exchange of the recognition unit, tailored biosensors could be created, allowing detecting a variety of analytes on demand. In the context of the cooperation with a company, initially, TNFalpha was chosen as an analyte. In a previous work, it was tried to build a modular aptazyme for TNFalpha that was based on four aptamers that were developed by SELEX. Here, these aptamers were investigated more closely by different methods (SPR, QCM). In the present work, it was proven beyond doubt that this attempt was not feasible. The aptamers were not able to bind the biologically active form of TNFalpha. An even more interesting finding was that a common tool to immobilize molecules to investigate their interactions with a binding partner, namely the streptavidin-biotin interaction, can strongly influence the result of the assay and causing false-positive results. Afterwards, it was decided to continue the work with a DNAzyme and modular approach was strictly refrained. It was tried to build aptazymes for TNFa or creatinine by in vitro selection, which failed. Most likely, the crucial factors were the ligands itself and the high demand on in vitro selection to select two functionalities (aptamer and catalytic activity) in parallel. This was the reason, to develop a new and a different method with streptavidin as a model analyte. The new strategy was to combine in vitro selection and rational design. The 17E-DNAzyme was chosen as catalytically active module. In preparation of the in vitro selection work, its properties were analyzed. An oligo-based inhibitor of the 17E-DNAzyme was rationally designed and its functionality was experimentally evaluated. Then, a library was designed which contained the 17E-DNAzyme, a randomized domain, and the inhibitor and its functionality was experimentally proven. The in vitro selection for the aptamer and the catalytic function were separated in two steps where the substrate strand was introduced in the second step. The knowledge about in vitro selection procedures, which was gained in the first trials with TNFalpha and creatinine was applied and could be substantially broadened. The crucial factors for the success of this process were identified. Most important steps are the amplification steps between the rounds and the in vitro selection pressure. The template concentration in the PCR has to be very low; the selection pressure has to be high. However, in fact, the exact quantity of "low" and "high" is difficult to determine exactly, it has to be individually evaluated for every amplification step, and this makes in vitro selection a method that requires a lot of experimental skills, optimization procedures, and experience. An EMSA was established and performed to qualitatively prove the affinity of the library for streptavidin in the first step of the in vitro selection method. For the second step, the in vitro selection of the catalytic function, considerable effort was done, but the in vitro selection did not succeed. Using the Biacore, the dissociation constant of the pool, which was applied in the second step of in vitro selection, was determined to be KD = 38 nM. This is very low, and by sequencing the pool it was found that the sequence variability was too low. The sequences share a cramp-like stem-loop structure, which hold the DNAzyme in an inactive conformation. This work presents valuable results for the development of biosensors based on nucleic acids, applying in vitro selection and rational design. Aptamers for streptavidin were selected. The library, which was used for this in vitro selection was structurally constrained. This obviously, represented an exceptionally good starting point for the in vitro selection. In this work, a lot of information about the development of in vitro selection systems was gained. Important work was done on establishing a click chemistry-based immobilization strategy. This work is going to fundamentally facilitate a new in vitro selection approach based on this immobilization strategy.
Chiral amines represent high-value fine chemicals serving as key intermediate products in pharmaceutical, chemical and agrochemical industries. In the past decades, application of amine transaminases (ATAs) for stereoselective amination of prochiral ketones emerged to an environmentally benign and economically attractive alternative to transition metal-catalyzed asymmetric synthesis to afford optically pure amines at industrial scale. However, the restricted substrate scope of wild-type transaminases prohibited the conversion of particularly sterically demanding substrates, making protein engineering indispensable. The following thesis covers elaboration of a novel assay for transaminases (Article I) and identification and development of transaminase variants in order to achieve biocatalytic preparation of a set of pharmaceutically relevant model amines, ideally in optically pure form for both stereoisomers, preferentially using asymmetric synthesis and most preferably using isopropylamine as cost-efficient amine donor co-substrate (Article II-IV). The aforementioned target amines and the corresponding precursor ketones (see Scheme 4.1) were conceived and provided by the company F. Hoffmann-La Roche to attain suitable biocatalysts for a variety of potential intermediates for active pharmaceutical ingredients. Protein engineering of the transaminase scaffolds investigated in this thesis comprised: Initial screening for suitable starting enzyme scaffolds, structure-guided rational design of these scaffolds to enable bulky planar substrate acceptance, elaboration of a sequence motif, verification of the motif and preparative-scale asymmetric synthesis reactions (Article II). For non-planar and structurally different target substrates, namely spatially bulky or bi-cyclic bridged substrates, the transaminase variants were specifically refined and a different evolutionary route had to be pursued (Article III and Article IV). These results (Article II) represent not only the first successful endeavor to engineer a PLP-fold type I amine transaminase (commonly denoted as (S)-selective) for the conversion of highly sterically demanding substrates, but also generally expanded the scope of available fold type I amine transaminases by enzymes having a novel and exceptionally broad substrate spectrum. Aside from structure-guided rational protein engineering, as well non-rational methods, such as site-specific saturation mutagenesis or directed evolution, were applied for protein-engineering. In order to do so for all of the target compounds, a novel high-throughput solid phase activity assay for transaminases that was actually developed during the master thesis, was refined and published (Article I). In the context of this thesis, the same assay principle was as well adapted for quantification of specific activities in liquid phase (Article III). A comparison of different methodologies for developing agar plate assays and a detailed step by step protocol of our transaminase assay are illustrated in a book chapter.
Pharmaceutical residues are found in increasing concentrations in the environment and in potable water where they have verifiable effects on aquatic life. Conventional methods for water treatment are not able to sufficiently abate these generally stable compounds. It was found that physical plasma generated directly in water can degrade several of these recalcitrant organic pollutants. Studies on the basic plasma chemical processes for the model system of phenol showed that the degradation is primarily caused by hydroxyl radicals. This was confirmed by reaction chemistry and spin trap enhanced electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR). The degradation of diclofenac and its by-products were investigated in detail to perform a first risk-assessment of the new technology. Findings are not limited to the application of plasma but applicable to other advanced oxidation processes (AOP) that are based on the generation of hydroxyl radicals as well. Additionally, pulsed corona plasma and pulsed electric fields were assessed for their capacity to kill Legionella pneumophila in water. Whereas it was possible to kill L. Pneumophila with both methods, plasma treatment resulted in an enhanced bacterial killing. Therefore, advanced oxidation processes (AOP) and plasma treatment in particular are some of the few feasible approaches to decompose recalcitrant compounds in water.
Introduction: Ketamine (KET) is widely used as anaesthetic drug. Beside its pronounced an-aesthetic effects as caused by antagonism of NMDA receptors, ketamine also causes potent analgesia. Moreover, There are ample new evidences, firstly, that 2R,6R/2S,6S-enantiomers of hydroxynorketamine (HNK), exert neuro-modulating effects by AMPA-receptor activation and, secondly, that the plasma levels of norketamine (n-KET) after oral dosing are higher than after intravenous administration. From the physicochemical point of view ketamine is expected to be a substrate of drug transporters. Thus, it was the aim of this study to separate and quantify KET and its metabolites in human serum, urine and feces; investigate the role of transporter proteins in the intestinal absorption, distribution and elimination of ketamine; and evaluate pharmacokinetics and metabolism of a newly developed prolonged-release keta-mine dosage form to confirm its suitability for chronic treatment of CNS-diseases (e.g. de-pression) according to the new “ketamine metabolite paradigm”. Materials and methods: Quantification of ketamine was done by a LC-MS/MS-based quantifi-cation method on the QTRAP4000 instrument. Samples were extracted by methyl tert-butyl ether after addition of sodium carbonate to liberate the free base; Single transfected MDCKII cells overexpressing OCT1, OCT2, OCT3, and MATE1 or MATE2K, and HEK293 cells over-expressing OATP2B1 were used to study the cellular uptake of ketamine. Inside-out lipovesi-cles were used to determine the affinity of ketamine to the efflux transporter P-glycoprotein (P-gp). Uptake into cells or vesicles was determined by liquid scintillation counting. Func-tionality of all in vitro systems was assured by using in each case appropriate probe sub-strates; The dose-escalation study was performed in five consecutive periods (7 days wash-out) in 15 healthy subjects (5 females and 10 males. 20-35 years, BMI 19.4-27.6 kg/m2). Results: We introduce for the first time the separation and quantification of the active me-tabolites 2R,6R/2S,6S-HNK; Ketamine was shown to be taken up significantly in a time- and concentration-dependent manner by OCT1-3. The affinity to OCT transporters at pH=6.5 was several fold higher than that at pH=7.4. ), ketamine showed a significant but low affinity to P-gp. In contrast to this, we could not detect any transport of ketamine by MATE1 / 2K or OACPT2B1; and PR-KET was safe and well tolerated with higher metabolites productivity, different pharmacokinetic properties and longer T1/2 when compared to IV-KET or IR-KET. Conclusion: the uptake transporters OCT1 & 3 and the efflux transporter P-gp may play a role in the intestinal absorption of the drug. On the other side, P-gp, MATE1 / 2K and OCT are not expected to contribute significantly to tissue (brain) distribution or renal excretion of ketamine; Moreover, the prolonged-release ketamine undergoes dose-dependent “first-pass” metabolism which generates substantially increased plasma exposure of downstream me-tabolites with potential neuro-modulating effects compared to ketamine after intravenous administration.
Investigation on the primary and secondary metabolism of marine and terrestrial endosymbionts
(2017)
Ph.D. thesis describes the metabolism of marine fungus and isolation of natural product for human use in part I and also describes earthworm endosymbiosis mechanism in part II. From the marine fungus project, three new producers have been identified for the previously reported bioactive secondary metabolites. And, from the Earthworm endosymbiosis project, the role of primary metabolites in the host fitness has been partially studied. the results outcome will be a partial contribution to microbial symbiosis.
The four stranded G-quadruplexes are important secondary structures of nucleic acids formed by guanosine-rich sequences. Besides the application as scaffold for technological applications, they are involved in many cellular processes such as gene regulation, replication, or maintenance of chromosomal ends. Characteristically, a large diversity of quadruplex structures is observed, whereas the correlation between sequence and structure is still not fully understood. In this thesis, the effects of modified nucleotides on G-quadruplexes were analyzed using NMR-spectroscopy to gain insight into driving forces determining the folding process. Contrary to DNA quadruplexes, the folding landscape of RNA structures is mostly restricted to parallel topologies. Therefore, ribose moieties were introduced into DNA sequences to isolate the effect of the additional hydroxy group. In this way, sequential CHO hydrogen bonds between the 2′-OH and the H8 of the 3′-neighbored anti conformer were identified and subsequently detected within RNA structures. In a second part, 2′-fluoro-2′-deoxyribose was incorporated at positions with guanosine in unfavored syn orientation. Instead of a changed global fold, the direction of the hydrogen bond network in the modified tetrad was reversed. This first example of tetrad inversion within a unimolecular quadruplex yielded a unique (3+1)-hybrid topology with only homopolar stacking interactions. Additionally, the effect was reproduced for another sequence and high-resolution structures were determined. Unfavored interactions between the 2′-fluorine and the narrow groove of the quadruplex were identified as a reason for different sugar conformations and consequent structural rearrangements.
In this thesis, rates and extend as well as the ecological implications of electron exchange reactions that involve redox-active moieties in organic matter (OM) were explored. The research builds on earlier findings that confirmed that OM may act as terminal electron acceptor (TEA) for electrons released in microbial respiration. This property was associated with quinone moieties that are ubiquitously found in OM from terrestrial and aquatic environments and that may undergo reversible reduction to the respective hydroquinone. Earlier methodological advances allowed for a rapid, direct and precise quantification of the electron accepting and donating properties of quinones in dissolved OM (DOM) by mediated electrochemical analysis. In this work, the previously established mediated electrochemical analysis was adapted and used in the characterization of redox properties of particulate natural samples that contain redox active iron and organic matter ("geochemical phases"). For the first time, direct measurements confirmed that microorganisms transferred electrons (e) from microbial respiration to the organic and inorganic electron acceptors in the particulate phase. Particulate OM in the sediments was found to provide a capacity to accept or donate e of 650 µmol e/gC. An incubation experiment resolved the spatiotemporal dynamics of organic and inorganic TEA species (i.e., nitrate, sulfate, Fe- and Mn oxyhydroxides) in sediments upon changes in oxygen availability and hence redox conditions. Oxygen is consumed when the reduced species are oxidized and, by this means, re-generate their electron-accepting capacity. The use of mediated electrochemical analysis allowed for the quantification of the redox state of the geochemical phases during their reduction and re-oxidation. The electron fluxes initiated by the oxic re generation of the TEAs nitrate, sulfate, Fe(III), Mn(IV) and quinoid moieties in OM were therefore directly monitored instead of modeled from the species’ distribution profiles in interstitial waters. The cyclic reduction and re-oxidation of redox species exposed to oxygen fluctuations was suspected to be a critical component of many aquatic ecosystems. In stratified lakes, extended sediment volumes are exposed to oxygen only upon lake overturn. Lake oxygen budgets are therefore influenced by benthic redox processes. The combined field and laboratory study showed that lake overturn seasonally introduces a finite amount of oxygen to the hypolimnion and that about 50% of the subsequent sediment oxygen consumption is exclusively associated with the re-generation of TEA species. These species previously formed in the sediment when organic matter was microbially decomposed during anaerobia. While lake overturn can completely mix epi- and hypolimnetic waters, small-scaled dynamics in temperature and oxygen availability may confine discrete parts of the water column with oscillations in physicochemical conditions. In the studied lake, a transient thermocline cyclically introduces oxygen to hypoxic hyplimnetic waters close to the pelagic redox interface. In the lake, organic TEAs may represent an important component of the total pelagic electron acceptor capacity. Due to the rapid and reversible redox reactions of DOM, reduced organic TEAs are re-generated upon dislocation to oxic parts of the water column. Results show that diurnal fluctuations of oxycline depth shape a micro-environment selecting for microbial species that are released from TEA limitations by OM in oxidized state. Pelagic microbial communities subjected to the same amount of OM in different oxidation states differed by more than 50% after one day. This work substantiates earlier findings that suggested that OM may be an important TEA species in many aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. OM reduction in microbial respiration was shown to directly affect critical system parameters as bacterial activity, oxygen budgets and aquatic biodiversity. Both the microbial reduction and subsequent abiotic oxidation of OM are sufficiently fast for relevant interaction with oxycline fluctuation on different timescales. Given that organic TEAs are cyclically regenerated, a significant share of ecosystem respiration could be linked to OM reduction. This thesis demonstrated the new and important role electron exchange reactions in OM-rich environments play and explored the mechanism of this previously neglected part of lake functioning. As of today, linking the chemistry of aquatic turnover processes with the microbiological and physical conditions at redox interfaces remains challenging. In conclusions, by providing several cases from aquatic environments, this thesis contributes to the mechanistic understanding of OM reduction in microbial respiration. The results prompt for further research regarding the competitive inhibition of other respiration pathways, including the reductive production of the potent greenhouse gas methane.
This thesis is about the establishment and the application of novel methods and tools that are re-lated to the most widely used enzyme class: hydrolases. It covers all fields from the identification to the application of these valuable enzymes with particular focus on lactonases, acylases and proteases. The activity assay introduced in Article I substantially extends the method toolbox for studies on lactonases and acylases that interfere with the bacterial cell-cell communication system. Article II describes a fully automatized robotic platform that represents the next-level tool for the high-throughput enzyme screening in the microtiter plate format. It was used, for instance, for the screening for improved porcine aminoacylase I variants. Diverse aspects of the protease-mediated hydrolysis of non-resistant proteins for the purification of resistant target proteins are highlighted in Article III.
The synthesis of valuable chemicals via traditional chemical methods can be often outperformed by the use of enzymes because of their excellent chemo-, regio- and stereoselectivity in aqueous solvents at ambient temperatures. On the other hand, enzymes often suffer from several limitations that hamper their industrial application. Protein engineering is commonly applied to overcome these limitations although the generation and the validation of mutants is often a laborious process that may not lead to the desired results within reasonable time frames. This thesis focuses on engineering the enantioselectivity and the substrate scope of industrially relevant enzymes, such as esterases and transaminases. Semi-rational protein engineering was employed to identify improved variants for the synthesis of valuable chemicals ensuring a reduced screening effort. Compared to previous works, 3DM’s applicability was extended to the study of correlated mutations and proved effective in the acceleration of the comprehension and in the mutation of these enzymatic scaffolds. Semi-rational approaches require an extensive amount of information such as protein structures, reaction mechanisms, previous mutational experiments reported in literature and a considerable amount of amino acid sequences from similar proteins to analyze amino acid distributions and correlated mutations. Here, we have exploited 3DM as a tool that can combine all this wealth of information: 3DM is a convenient solution to retrieve and integrate information simplifying decision making in the planning of a semi-rational mutant library since in 3DM’s multiple sequence alignments (MSA) is summarized Nature’s screening process for alternative variants. Furthermore, naturally evolving enzymes often require mutations at more than one position for the acquisition of a new property. Such mutations generate patterns that are recognized by the 3DM algorithm, which creates networks that can be investigated to design strategies that aim to improve the property of interest. Finally, these correlated mutations are connected to the mutations described in publications covered in the PubMed database, thus helping to investigate the role certain positions might play in the network. Article I shows that it is possible to improve the enantioselectivity of an esterase towards a highly symmetrical substrate while drastically reducing the screening effort. This was achieved through the creation of libraries that limit the variants to those identified in the 3DM alignment. Article II shows that networks of correlated mutations are composed of positions that may cluster around a function. These functions can be investigated because 3DM connects the positions in the network to their related publications. In this article, a mutant of the esterase PFE-I from Pseudomonas fluorescens was generated having increased enantioselectivity in the hydrolysis of important target compounds. Article III suggests that the in silico modelling software YASARA, combined with the use of the 3DM database, can further reduce the screening effort: it was possible to identify a hot-spot because both the 3DM database and YASARA docking studies, indicated its importance. This led to a further improved enantioselectivity of the enzyme variant identified in Article II. Article IV shows how MSA may be used to get structural insights into the catalytic properties of enzymes with documented activity. The study of the patterns observed in a large subfamily alignment allowed the definition of the structural determinants important for the substrate recognition in amine transaminases. Article V and VI apply the knowledge acquired for the improvement of the substrate scope in the amine transaminase from Vibrio fluvialis.
Interactions between bacteria and the human body are manifold and happen constantly. Most parts of the skin and gastrointestinal tract, the saliva, the oral mucosa, the conjunctiva and the vaginal mucosa are colonized with a multitude of bacterial species forming the human microbiota. Strikingly, the estimated amount of bacterial cells outnumbers the human body by 10 to 1. However, most of these bacteria colonize the human body without positive or negative effects and are regarded as commensals. Staphylococcus aureus a Gram positive bacterium is such a commensal bacterium of 25 % to 30 % of the world population. It is also an opportunistic pathogen and is able to cause infections in the lung, skin and heart and to induce sepsis. Its pathogenicity is mainly facilitated by the secretion of a broad spectrum of virulence factors which interact with the host. Some are distracting the immune system, others are targeting the host cell membrane or degrade macromolecular structures of the host in order to provide nutrients. Furthermore S. aureus is able to invade the host cell and to survive and replicate in the host cell cytosol or other compartments. The Gram negative proteobacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei is an environmental bacterium but still has the ability to enter the human body via body orifices or skin wounds. In a very efficient way it penetrates the host cell, replicates intracellular and the uses host structures to spread from cell to cell thereby causing the disease melioidosis often with fatal outcomes. Since the natural habitats of B. pseudomallei are wet soils, the change to the environment in the human body is drastic and requires a high degree of flexibility of the bacterium. Environmental stress conditions such as temperature, pH, nutrient limitation or presence of antibiotics induce a switch of colony morphology which is a special characteristic of this bacterium. Since it is assumed, that changes in colony morphology are connected to adaptive processes to the environmental changes, these morphology switches might also be important during infection. The host organism and the host cell on the other side try to kill and remove the bacterial threat by activating the immune system and cellular defence mechanisms. This includes generation of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, production of antimicrobial peptides and cellular processes such as phagocytosis, autophagy, apoptosis and activation of the immune response. The actions and reactions on both, the pathogen side and the host side, are summarized as host-pathogen interactions. In the field of functional genomics, methods were developed to understand various levels of host-pathogen interactions. The holistic analysis of the mRNA (the transcriptome) or translated proteins (the proteome) were already very useful tools to describe important cellular processes on the host and the pathogen site. The level of metabolites with regard to host-pathogen interactions however, has been neglected so far. In this dissertation the metabolic composition in the intracellular and extracellular space of the host and the pathogen was analyzed. For this matter biochemical analytical tools were used such as 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and chromatographic methods (GC and HPLC) coupled to mass spectrometry. The combination of these methods allows a broad coverage of physicochemical diverse metabolites. In accordance to the above mentioned biological levels like mRNA and proteins, the sum of all metabolites is referred as the metabolome. Consequently to transcriptomics and proteomics the analysis of the metabolome is referred as metabolomics. To gain insights into the infection relevant metabolome of the host-pathogen relationship between S. aureus and human lung cells several approaches were developed. First the distribution of the recently identified bacillithiol in different S. aureus strains was investigated with regard to its role during the infection. For that matter a HPLC-methodology was used with fluorescence based detection of labelled low molecular weight thiols (article I: Distribution and infection-related functions of bacillithiol in Staphylococcus aureus). After that the next aim was to reveal the effect of S. aureus on the host cell metabolism. To reduce the complexity of effects on the host cells an artificial model was chosen in a first approach. The lung cells were treated with the staphylococcal virulence factor alpha-hemolysin, a pore forming toxin and a holistic metabolomics approach was performed (article II: Staphylococcus aureus Alpha-Toxin Mediates General and Cell Type-Specific Changes in Metabolite Concentrations of Immortalized Human Airway Epithelial Cells). Using this approach, a protocol for cell culture metabolomics was established and first changes in the host cell metabolome that could be caused by S. aureus were described. However, this only describes specific changes caused by one single virulence factor and does not necessarily describes the reality during a S. aureus infection. Therefore in a next approach, an infection model using a human lung epithelial cell line and the S. aureus strain USA300 was established and used for metabolome analysis. Furthermore a combination of inhibitor treatment and metabolic labelling was used to clarify the metabolic activity in the host cell after exposure to S. aureus (article III: Metabolic features of a human airway epithelial cell line infected with Staphylococcus aureus revealed by a metabolomics approach). Finally this thesis deals with the host-pathogen interaction of B. pseudomallei and its host with a focus on the role of the switch in colony morphology in basic metabolism. Various morphotypes of two strains were generated by nutrient limitation and their uptake of nutrients was monitored. Furthermore the morphotypes were used in in vitro and in vivo infections and subsequently isolated out of the cell line and mice respectively. After isolation, the colony morphology was determined and again the nutrient uptake profile was monitored (article IV: Burkholderia pseudomallei morphotypes show a synchronized metabolic pattern after acute infection). The information provided by this thesis adds a new complexity to the knowledge about the host-pathogen interactions of S. aureus and B. pseudomallei and their hosts. It furthermore lays the groundwork for future studies, which will deal with these and other bacterial host-pathogen interactions in order to understand the interdependencies of infection and metabolism.
Cascade reactions are not only of interest to chemists and biotechnologists, but also to life in general, because every metabolic reaction resembles a cascade reaction. This principle of substrate/intermediate channeling was only adapted by scientists. That way especially one-pot reactions became very attractive as for this no isolation of intermediates is necessary. Furthermore, unstable or toxic intermediates are only produced in low amounts and directly transformed in situ. In this PhD thesis two previously established cascade reactions were subject of further optimization. In the first part, a cascade reaction established in a DFG-funded project (Bo1862/6-1)in cooperation with the Vienna Technical University (Austria) for the production of chiral lactones was further optimized and extended. Therefore, on the one hand the genes encoding the needed enzymes were cloned for co-expression into a single plasmid in different arrangements to be expressed in pseudo-operon mode, with the aim to lower the metabolic burden of the cascade host cell. One out of the welve created constructs showed a reasonable activity of 15.3 ± 1.2 U · gCDW-1. On the other hand, this cascade reaction was aimed to be extended by the use of a hydroxylating enzyme to enable the use of limonene as renewable and chiral precursor for the proposed production of chiral polymers. Therefore, the feasibility of cytochrome P450-monooxygenases was studied. These turned out to be not applicable due to their bad regioselectivity for the hydroxylation of limonene or due to the difficulties of activity reconstitution. As alternative system for an initial hydroxylation step the use of a Rhodococcus equi strain, which was isolated from Cellulosimicrobium cellulans EB-8-4 and which is capable of very regioselective limonene-hydroxylation, was investigated. Therefore, the dioxygenase cluster responsible for the desired reaction was identified and especially the recombinant expression in a suitable host (Pseudomonas putida S12) was further studied. The results from these experiments revealed that the recombinant expression needs to be further optimized to enable the use of the recombinant dioxygenase in combination with the other enzymes for cascade reactions. The third part of this PhD thesis dealt with the immobilization of an established cascade reaction for the synthesis of poly-[caprolactone] precursors. Therefore, the use of a rotating bed reactor (RBR) was investigated. Preliminary studies using single enzymes involved in the desired cascade reaction demonstrated the general feasibility of this reactor concept. Especially the reusability of the catalysts was highly improved, because the catalytic particles were protected very effectively from mechanical forces within the voids of the reactor. For further work-flow optimization the immobilization was transformed into an in situ process by the application of a gas-shear device, which leads to decreased capsule size and thereby to increased mass transfer inside the particles. The developed methods were applied for encapsulation of the cells containing the enzymes needed for the reaction. After additional improvement of the reaction parameters a conversion of 93% (based on substrate depletion) was reached using catalysts produced by the established encapsulation procedure. In summary, the described cascade reactions were successfully optimized by either co-expression, extension applying a dioxygenase or immobilization. Furthermore, the general feasibility of an RBR was demonstrated.
Enzymatic evolution and the corresponding relationship to substrate scope and catalytic promiscuity were targeted in this thesis. As enzyme examples, pig liver esterase (PLE), oleate hydratases and linoleate isomerases, as well as epoxide hydrolases (EH) and haloalkane dehalogenases (HLD) were used. The substrate scope and the enantiopreference of PLE was analyzed by molecular modeling and substrate docking, since different enantiomeric excesses were detected for the conversion of malonate diethyl esters, depending on the PLE isoenzyme. Additionally, fatty acid converting enzymes with high identity were found and analyzed to comprehend the switch of both activities. Furthermore, the evolutionary connection between EH and HLD was investigated by interconversion studies to implement an HLD acitivity in an EH. By directed evolution and rational design, both possibilities of protein engineering were realized. Finally, a new methodology for targeted, continuous in vivo evolution was established by a temperature-dependent mutagenesis frequency.
An interesting subclass of the SLs are Cers, the simplest SLs. Cers are assigned a special role within SLs because of their involvement in many cellular and biophysical processes.In literature Cers are describe to modulate many events in signaling including apoptosis. Besides its role as second messenger and therefore the involvement in many signal cascades, Cers are also known to be essential in physical modifications and structural alternations of membranes. Such regulatory functions on membrane formation are e.g. domain formation with other lipids (i.g. SM and Chol), phase separation with sterols (Chol), vesicular trafficking, fusion, membrane curvature fluidity and thickness and the induction of membrane leakiness. In contrast to phospholipids, Cers can move from one side of the membrane leaflet to the other, due to their strong hydrophobicity. This movement is called flip-flop or as transbilayer movement and is controversially discussed. Consequently, no exact value has been reported about the flip-flop property of Cers, which probably plays an important role during the transmission of an extra cellular signal through the membrane.In order to probe the biophysical properties of ceramides, a synthetic access to 1-thioceramides (1-SHCer) analogues with different N-acyl chain length has been developed in this study. With 1SHCer the flip-flop was investigated on pre-formed liposomes and the data indicated a very rapid flip-flop of Cers with a half time t1/2 <10s in raft- and non-raft like membrane models. Furthermore, the acyl chain length exhibited no measurable impact on the speed of the flip-flop. Utilizing the same probes the importance of hydrogen bond donor and acceptor properties of Cers upon interaction with sphingomyelin in the presence or absence of cholesterol (Chol) has been probed. Performed fluorescent quenching experiments (P.Slotte) proposed the following relative preference in interaction with pSM:pSM:DAGs > pSM:Cer > pSM:Chol > pSM: 1-pCerSH.Most strikingly, the importance of the 1-OH H-bond acceptor functionality to replace Chol around and above the melting temperature of pSM has been demonstrated. Recently, an unusual subclass of SLs, named 1-deoxysphingoids have come to the foreground, as biomarker for metabolic disorders. 1-doxSA is physiologically generated (10-40nM) due to substrate promiscuity of SPT and shown to be elevated in patients with metabolic disorders. In this study an organic synthetic access to fluorescent DSB derivatives was established, featuring a fluorescent moiety at the lipid tail, such as FITC 26. Comprehensive fluorescent studies of 26 revealed an unusual subcellular distribution. Exogenous 1-doxSA analogues, such as FB1 and 1-doxSA-FITC, enter via specific entry points. During the next few hours these lipids accumulate within the cytosol prior to N-acylation by CerS. Upon N-acylation, the newly formed 1-doxdhCer and its analogues insert into the ER membrane.The fluorescent probe and most likely FB1 analogues accumulate within the late endosomal and lysosomal system, probably via a direct connection with the ER. Analysis of the lipid metabolism of unlabeled 1-doxSA and FB1 revealed a strikingly similar behavior, pointing towards a common pharmacological effect. Complete consumption of TG within 24h in epithelia cells combined with GO analysis of 1-doxSA interacting lipids indicates significant modulation of fatty acid degradation, pointing towards regulation of the energy metabolism. This is in good agreement with the observed induction of autophagy. Together, this rapid and similar metabolic change of both 1-doxSA and FB1, points toward direct 1-doxSA head-group related lipid-protein interaction and less toward the influence of FB1 on CerS activity. This work suggests the biological significance of 1-doxSA as a primary nutrient sensor to maintain nutrient homeostasis and its role in the pathophysiology of metabolic diseases.
This thesis investigates the biocatalytic synthesis of amines and amino alcohols. The applicability and economic feasibility of biocatalysis for chiral amine synthesis is reviewed and the findings were compared to established chemical processes using relevant process parameters (TON, TOF and STY). This review clearly showcases the potential of biocatalysis for the synthesis of chiral amines and provides a valuable guide for synthetic chemists who want to benefit from these new opportunities. Next, biocatalysis is applied for the synthesis of an amino alcohol with two stereocentres: A novel route for the synthesis of all four stereoisomers of 4-amino-1-phenylpentane-2-ol is presented. Enzymes were applied to install both stereocentres successively, which allowed the selective synthesis with high yields and optical purities. A small scale preparative asymmetric transamination yielded one amino alcohol stereoisomer selectively. The approach presented in this thesis provides a valuable option for the synthesis of this compound class as it is highly selective, step efficient and circumvents the need for protecting groups as well as transition-metal catalysis. The substrate scope of an (S)-selective amine transaminase (ATA) was altered in order to expand the applicability for amino alcohol synthesis. Protein engineering was conducted to enlarge the small binding pocket. Small scale preparative synthesis of the 1,2-amino alcohol (R)-phenylglycinol exemplifies the applicability of the evolved variants for the asymmetric synthesis of this compound. The designed variants expand the collection of ATAs that are suitable for the synthesis of amino alcohols with bulkier substituents. To deepen the understanding of ATAs further, a class III TA family wide analysis (which includes (S)-selective ATAs) is presented. After comparing the active site architectures and performing literature research amino acids were identified that correlate with the reaction- and substrate specificity of the enzymes within this family. This information is compiled in a sequence-function matrix, which allows the prediction of the main activity of biochemically uncharacterised enzymes from their sequence. These insights provide a better understanding of the activity determining residues in (S)-ATAs and class III TAs in general.
In this thesis an artificial enzyme cascade consisting of an ADH from Lactobacillus kefir, a CHMO from Acinetobacter sp. NCIMB 9871 and lipase A from Candida antarctica has been investigated for the biocatalytic synthesis of the bulk chemical ε-caprolactone as well as several derivatives for their direct utilization as polymer building blocks. Due to major limitations, which hamper such a biocatalytic route, the first addressed demand in this work was the improvement of the stability of the CHMO. By structure-guided engineering, distinctively improved variants concerning the resistance against oxidation as well as temperature stability without compromising the catalytic activity were successfully created. Due to the incomplete knowledge of the mechanisms that lead to thermal and/or oxidative inactivation of enzymes, this study illustrates that the selection of mutations for increased protein stability is still hard to predict. Thus, these results can serve as a basis for further stability studies on this enzyme class to give better insights into the underlying mechanisms, which determine the stability of an enzyme. Such a highly stabilized biocatalyst will pave the way for the successful use of flavin-dependent enzymes for industrial applications. A further aim of this thesis was dedicated to the second major hurdle en route to polyester precursors represented by the product inhibition and enzyme deactivation caused by ε-caprolactone, particularly at higher concentrations. To overcome this limitation, we developed an elegant solution in which the ε-caprolactone produced by the one-pot two-step enzymatic method is directly subjected to ring-opening polymerization using the unique lipase A from Candida antarctica. Applying this enzyme cascade in a whole cell biocatalysis in combination with an improved cofactor regeneration approach, the problem of product inhibition problem was efficiently solved leading to the formation of oligo-ε-caprolactone at more than 20 g/L when starting from 200 mM cyclohexanol. By a process development approach through solvent engineering it was found that biotransformations proceed much faster in an isooctane-containing biphasic solvent system when using free enzymes. Finally, the improved enzyme cascade was applied for the synthesis of chiral substrates and provided access to functionalized chiral compounds in high yields (up to >99%) and optical purities (up to >99%ee). By subsequent enzymatic enantioselective ring-opening of the enantiopure monomers, oligomeric lactones were successfully synthesized, which can be directly serve as building blocks for the polymer industry.
Because heavy metal ions prefer to bind sulfur, inspired by molybdopterin the main goal of this work was combining dithiolene binding moieties with optically active substituents with the aim to detect/capture metal ions, which could preferably bind to the dithiolene moiety of for instance MPT. Therefore a number of dithiolene based molecules mimicking the natural immediate coordination sphere composition of Mo and W dependent oxidoreductase enzymes were synthesized and characterized by NMR, MS, IR, X-ray crystallography, UV-Vis, EPR and electrochemical methods. In order to work at the lowest possible base concentration due to potentially base sensitive substituents and reaction partners, the procedure for the de-protection of the ligand precursors and the in situ complexation reaction was first optimized in course of the work and interim we explored the surprising fact that the ring opening reaction of the 1,3- dithiol-2-one system is fully reversible and can be controlled simply by adjusting the pH-value of the solution. Then, the coordination behavior of the de-protected ligands towards different metal ions, including biologically relevant ions like Cu+, Cu2+, Fe3+ was tested. As the optically active substituents necessarily possess interesting electronic properties, a second focus of this work was to utilize the developed ligand systems for MoCo and WCo models and to investigate their potential catalytic activity in the model oxotransfer reaction between DMSO and PPh3 in order to evaluate the substituent’s effect on the dithiolene binding moiety.
Structure– and sequence–function relationships in (S)-amine transaminases and related enzymes
(2015)
Chiral primary amines are valuable building blocks for many biologically active compounds. Environmentally friendlier alternatives to the classical methods for α-chiral primary amine synthesis are highly desired. A biocatalytic alternative that recently proved beneficial for industrial applications is asymmetric synthesis utilising (S)-selective amine transaminases (S-ATAs). These enzymes can be utilized to transaminate a prochiral ketone with an amino donor (e.g. isopropylamine), to achieve a chiral amine and a carbonyl product (e.g. acetone). However, for several potential applications protein engineering is required to fit (S)-ATAS to the demands of an industrial process. Since no (S)-ATA crystal structure required for understanding the substrate recognition and thus protein engineering was available, we first aimed at obtaining structural data. Instead of solving crystal structures ourselves, we took advantage of structural genomics projects and discovered, that the protein data bank (PDB) already contained crystal structures of four enzymes with unknown function that we hypothesised to possess (S)-ATA activity. After developing a screening method, the four enzymes could be characterized as ω-amino acid:pyruvate transaminases (ωAA:pyr TAs). (S)-amine conversion was suggested to be a ‘substrate-promiscuous’ activity of these enzymes, as it is pronounced differently in the four investigated ones. By comparing the active sites of the highly and poorly active (S)-ATAs, the residues that determine the ability of amine conversion in these enzymes were discovered. Furthermore, the mechanism for dual substrate recognition, the binding of both, carboxyl and bulky hydrophobic substrates in the same active site, could be elucidated with the crystal structures. A flexible arginine side chain is able to adopt various positions thus enabling carboxylate binding and by ‘flipping’ out of the active site, to create space for amine binding. Then, a limitation of these enzymes, the restricted substrate scope caused by a small binding pocket was addressed. First, a rational protein engineering approach was set up to create more space. The tested mutations, however, destroyed most of the activity for both regular and more bulky substrates. We thus learned that the structural requirements for (S)-ATA activity are more complex than initially anticipated and a semi-rational approach was applied to broaden the substrate scope. By systematic saturation of active site positions, substantially improved mutants for bulkier amine synthesis could be obtained. As this study highlighted a lack of understanding of (S)-ATA, the functional important residues in the enzymes belonging to the class III TA family were surveyed. This family is defined by common sequence and structure features and besides (S)-ATAs mainly comprises TAs of various substrate scopes but also a few phospholyases, racemases and decarboxylases. To enable the comparison of active site residues among them, a commercial bioinformatics tool was used to create a family wide structure-based alignment of around 13,000 sequences. Based on statistical analyses of this alignment, structural inspections and literature evaluation, active site residues crucial for certain specificities within this family have been identified. By investigating the ingenious active site designs that enable such a plethora of reactions, and by identifying sets of functional important residues termed ‘active site fingerprints’, the understanding of catalysis in this enzyme family could be broadened. Furthermore, these functional important residues can on the one hand be applied to predict the specificity of uncharacterised enzymes, if a fingerprint is matched. On the other hand, if no fingerprint is matched, they can help to discover yet unknown activities or mechanisms to achieve a known specificity. We exemplified the latter case by functionally characterising a Bacillus anthracis enzyme with the crystal structure 3N5M, whose substrate specificity was unknown and could not be predicted. The 3N5M enzyme was found to possess ωAA:pyr TA and (S)-ATA activity even though it lacks the above-mentioned ‘flipping’ arginine. Based on molecular dynamics simulations we were able to propose an alternative mechanism for dual substrate recognition in the B. anthracis ωAA:pyr TA. By these findings the understanding of the requirements for (S)-ATA activity could be further broadened and a functional knowledge gap within the class III TA family was closed. The active site residue composition in 3N5M is now connected to enzymatic function and may be applied for future specificity predictions.
HPMC (Hydroxypropylmethylcellulose) based hydrophilic gel matrix tablets are one of the most commonly used monolithic extended release dosage forms used in the pharmaceutical industry. Drug release from the hydrated HPMC matrix is generally controlled by either diffusion or erosion, or a combination of both. Several studies have shown that for HPMC-based matrices with a high amount of poorly water-soluble additives, erosion is the predominant release mechanism. Erosion rates of these formulations vary significantly with changes in the matrix composition. Depending on the erosion rate, the drug delivery might occur over a shorter or longer time span and thus to different sites of action that are proximal or distal gastrointestinal tract (GIT). Erosion rates of HPMC-based matrices can be modulated by changing the amount and molecular weight of the HPMC. In the present study, four different HPMC-based hydrophilic matrix formulations developed by AstraZeneca R&D, Sweden, were investigated for in vitro as well as in vivo erosion behavior. Formulations F1, F2, and F3 consist of 40% HPMC, which is a mixture of two different HPMC viscosity grades (Methocel K100LV and Methocel K4M). Formulations F1, F2, and F3 contained 23%, 10%, and 0% of Methocel K4M, respectively, while formulation F4 was composed of 20% Methocel K100LV. Calcium hydrogen phosphate dihydrate (a poorly water-soluble compound) was used as the filling excipient. The in vitro HPMC release from the matrices was investigated using a USP dissolution apparatus II equipped with a stationary basket in a phosphate buffer (PB) pH 6.8 and simulated gastric fluid without pepsin (SGFsp) pH 1.2 at various rotation speeds. The HPMC concentration in the dissolution samples were analyzed using size exclusion chromatography coupled with multiangle light scattering and refractive index detectors (SEC-MALS/RI). In order to establish a correlation function between the magnetic moment and HPMC release, the formulations were tested in a magnetic moment dissolution tester (MMDT), a modified in vitro dissolution apparatus equipped with a magnetometer. The in vivo gastrointestinal imaging and erosion behavior of the tablets were investigated by magnetic marker monitoring (MMM) using a superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs) sensor system in five healthy male volunteers at Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), Berlin. All formulations were administered after an overnight fast of at least 10 hours. However, formulations 3 and 4 were also administered 30 minutes after a standard FDA breakfast. The in vivo HPMC release was calculated using the correlation function from the recorded in vivo magnetic moment data. A linear correlation function was not observed, since the decrease of the magnetic signal was driven by both erosion and diffusion. The in vitro and in vivo erosion-time profiles show that erosion was strongly dependent on the composition of the formulation. The formulations containing a larger proportion of high molecular weight HPMC, or a higher content of HPMC, exhibited relatively slower erosion rates and vice versa. However, unlike in vitro erosion rates, the in vivo erosion rates for different formulations did not always significantly differ from each other. In vivo erosion rates of the investigated formulations were significantly higher under postprandial administration than under fasted state administration. No rapid disintegration of any of the formulations (that is, formulation failure that can potentially cause dose dumping) was observed. A good linear (point-to-point) correlation between the in vitro HPMC release at 50 rpm in PB pH 6.8 and the in vivo HPMC release was observed for all formulations in the individual volunteers for both administration conditions. The predictability of the in vivo HPMC release for all formulations in fasting as well as postprandial administrations was better with phosphate buffer pH 6.8 at 50 rpm in comparison to SGFsp pH 1.2 or higher stirring rate in phosphate buffer pH 6.8. In postprandial administrations, the gastric emptying time was significantly delayed compared to fasting administrations. For postprandial administrations, the localized erosion rate in the distal stomach was significantly higher than in the proximal stomach. The in vivo HPMC release of the investigated formulations under both intake conditions was not dependent on the motility of the tablet in the gastrointestinal tract. The in vivo HPMC release for all the investigated formulations when administered under fasting conditions was underestimated, while under postprandial conditions, the HPMC release was overestimated by the in vitro dissolution method in PB pH 6.8 at 50 rpm.
Heparin is an anticoagulant drug. It is important in the treatment of deep vein thrombosis,pulmonary embolism and during surgeries. Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is a severe adverse reaction caused by the formation of ultralarge complexes of platelet factor 4 (PF4) with unfractionated heparin (UFH). It can lead to limb loss or fatal events like stroke, myocardial infarction or pulmonary embolism. HIT has an incidence of about 3% in patients receiving anticoagulative heparin treatment. PF4 is a tetrameric protein, released from the α-granules of platelets upon activation. PF4 is known to form antigenic complexes with UFH accompanied by structural changes of PF4. In this thesis, the size and size distribution of PF4 and PF4/heparin complexes were analyzed using asymmetrical flow field-flow-fractionation (AF4), photon correlation spectroscopy (PCS) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). PF4 tends to form auto-aggregates and to adsorb to different surfaces, including regenerated cellulose, polyethersulfone, quartz and glass. The aggregates are less pronounced in solutions at isotonic NaCl concentration. Arginine and Tween 20 were identified as possible ingredients to hinder the auto-aggregation of PF4. Also, it is shown by combining circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy (AFM) and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) with UFH and defined chain length (16-, 8-, 6-, 5-mer) heparins that structural changes (i.e., increase in β-sheets) alone are not sufficient to induce antigenicity. While UFH, 16-, 8-, and 6-mer heparins all induced an increase in the antiparallel β-sheet content to > 30% (as determined by CD spectroscopy), complex antigenicity as measured by anti-PF4/heparin antibody binding in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (EIA) was only induced by UFH and 16-mer heparin. Fondaparinux (5-mer heparin), which forms in vitro non-antigenic complexes with PF4, did not induce structural changes of PF4. Interestingly, the structural changes induced by antigenic UFH and 16-mer heparin but not by non-antigenic shorter heparins were reversible at higher heparin concentrations. Furthermore, the complexes formed by PF4 with longer heparins were larger than those formed with shorter heparins as shown by atomic force microscopy (AFM). UFH, HO16 and HO08 are able to form ultralarge multimolecular complexes with PF4. ITC data indicated strong electrostatic interactions and energetically unfavorable conformational changes of PF4 with longer heparins, while for the short heparins, favorable conformational changes in the structure of PF4 are induced. This explains the reversibility of the structural changes seen for UFH and HO16 upon addition of an over-saturating amount of heparin. Finally, using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) the thermal stability of PF4 and PF4/heparin complexes was assessed. Despite its tendency to form auto-aggregates, PF4 is a heat-stable protein. This stability is, length dependently, even increased in complex with heparins. This work shows important differences in the binding between PF4 and heparins of different chain length and might be relevant for the understanding of other biological functions of heparins (e.g., involvement in allergic and inflammatory reactions).
Simulations of Short Model Peptides and Practically Relevant Modeled Titanium Implant Surfaces
(2014)
One of the aims of this work was to generate a non restrained force field model including carbon contamination to make the adsorption simulations more realistic and comparable with experimental data. Another purpose was to find out how the special recognition of small linker proteins on titanium dioxide is working. During this work a fixed and a non restrained rutile (100) model was used and critical properties were observed which are not only related to the surface. The rigid water layers on top of the oxide are very important for the protein and peptide adsorption. Therefore the first discussing object were the properties of the water layers and how they can be influenced. The charge distribution on the surface was found to have a big effect on them. Depending on the charges of the surface atoms or the functional groups, resulting out of the hydroxylation equilibrium, precisely the first water layer gets more rigid or smother. This has a big effect on biomolecule adsorption. The peptides need to penetrate these water layers to generate direct interaction points. The correct description of the surface in molecular dynamic simulations therefore has a high influence on the results. The better the model is the better the findings are comparable with experimental ones. Additionally carbon contamination was mimicked by using a monolayer of pentanol molecules. This fits very good with experimental data (e.g. contact angle) and make the oxide model more hydrophobic. Interaction of proteins and peptides in experiments or in medical use are often observed under normal air conditions, which means that the scaffold is i) hydroxylated by water and ii) carbon contaminated in a short period of time. Therefore investigations were done to find out how the contamination influences the adsorption of a formally know good or bad binding peptide (TiOBP1; TiOBP2). It was found that the TiOBP1 is able to bind the different surface modifications very well which coincides with observations made in experiments. The way of adsorption (direct or indirect) depends on the water layers properties. The first layer on high charged surface models is that rigid, that the peptide is not able to adsorb in a direct way. On the carbon contaminated oxide model the adsorption is possible by reducing the flexibility of the secondary structure motive. In the case of TiOBP2 adsorption on the clean surface model results in only weak binding or even in no interaction. Whereas on the carbon contaminated dioxide the once know bad binder is able to interact with the Pentanol monolayer. No direct adsorption is observed but the hydrophobic side chains have the possibility to orient themselves according to the hydrophobic layer without changing significantly in the secondary structure motive. An additional test peptide (minTBP) adsorbs without being affected by the contamination. This raises the question if the distribution of hydrophobic to hydrophilic amino acids has influence on the adsorption ability according to clean and contaminated surface. For experimental application it could be of interest to generated peptides (GEPI´s) which bind both surface types without changing the secondary structure motives then as we know functionality is based on these structures. In the case of the PHMB polymer adsorption was observed depending on the hydroxylation ratio and therefore on the charge density of the rutile (100) surface. After analysis of the simulations takeaways from experiments could be substantiated. The PHMB interacts with the negative charged surface via the first water layer as a film. So the new force field model describing the rutile (100) titanium dioxide surface with additional carbon contamination model of one monolayer pentanol fits the experimental data very well. The adsorption studied on this surfaces indicates that the contamination as expected makes the surface more hydrophobic and influences the adsorption behavior of the tested peptides especially the secondary structure of TiOBP1. This indeed enhances experimental investigations. Peptides which e.g. link organic and inorganic parts should be good adsorbing on clean and contaminated surfaces by keeping their functionality. Furthermore experimental data can be substantiated by using atomistic simulations like in the case of PHMB adsorption.
Within this thesis the protein engineering, immobilization and application of enzymes in organic synthesis were studied in order to enhance the productivity of diverse biotransformations. Article I is a review about Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenases (BVMO) and provides a detailed overview of the most recent advantages in the application of that enzyme class in biocatalysis. Protein engineering of a former uncharacterized polyol-dehydrogenase (PDH) identified in the mesothermophilic bacterium Deinococcus geothermalis 11300 is described in Article II. Article III covers the combination of one PDH mutant with a BVMO in a closed-loop cascade reaction, thus enabling direct oxidation of cyclohexanol to ε-caprolactone with an internal cofactor recycling of NADP(H). Article IV and Article V report a process optimization for transamination reactions due to a newly developed immobilization protocol for five (S)- and (R)-selective aminotransferases (ATA) on chitosan support. Furthermore, the immobilized ATAs were applied in asymmetric amine synthesis. In Article VI, an ATA immobilized on chitosan, an encapsulated BVMO whole cell catalyst and a commercially available immobilized lipase were applied in a traditional fixed-bed (FBR) or stirred-tank reactor (STR), and were compared to a novel reactor design (SpinChem, SCR) for heterogeneous biocatalysis.
The metabolomic approach is one part of the "-omics" cascade further comprising genomic, transcriptomic, and proteomic investigations. Since information about the metabolome of the important human pathogenic bacterium Staphylococcus aureus is scarce, the aim of this thesis is the characterization of the exo- and endometabolome of this bacterium on a most global scale. For this, the metabolomic platform consisting of the analytical instruments used for 1H-NMR spectroscopy, HPLC-MS, and GC-MS analysis was applied. First, the requirements for an accurate sampling procedure for the analysis of intracellular metabolites are presented, explaining important pitfalls during the sampling and the subsequent metabolome analysis via HPLC-MS and GC-MS (book chapter I). The challenging task of the metabolite identification is demonstrated, as well as the requirements for absolute quantification of intracellular metabolites. In order to enhance the knowledge about the staphylococcal physiology and the biochemical network, the impact of different stresses and varying cultivation media on the bacterial metabolite pool was investigated in several studies. In article I, a first description of the primary metabolism of growing S. aureus COL cells cultivated aerobically in CDM is provided. This study also monitored the adaptation to glucose starvation on the level of metabolites and proteins. The uptake of all amino acids and the secretion and reuse of overflow metabolites were analyzed in a time-dependent manner. During the switch to a non-growing state, a drastic rearrangement of the amino acid pool in the bacterial cells was detected, and intracellular amounts of glycolytic intermediates were found to decrease in parallel to extracellular glucose exhaustion. During infection processes, S. aureus has to cope with varying levels of oxygen supply, including anaerobic conditions. A global metabolomic approach investigated the adaptation of S. aureus COL to strict anaerobic conditions using CDM as the culture medium. Thereby only linear growth was possible despite the higher uptake rate of glucose compared to aerobically, logarithmically growing cells. In an anoxic environment, S. aureus mainly switched on the less reliable lactic acid fermentation. Only serine and threonine but no alanine were significantly taken up. Subsequent glucose limitation led to energy starvation indicated by a drop in the adenylate energy charge. This was accompanied with an arrest of the fermentative metabolism and declining numbers of colony-forming units without taking advantage of the energy supplying arginine deiminase pathway. Compared to the established CDM, the eukaryotic cell culture medium RPMI 1640 provides more in vivo-like growth conditions. In article II, the growth behavior and the metabolic footprint of the S. aureus strains COL and HG001 were investigated during the aerobic cultivation in RPMI 1640 medium. Both strains are commonly used in laboratory research. The observed uptake and secretion pattern of extracellular metabolites provides important information for infection studies in which this medium is used for the precultivation of S. aureus. The extracellular accumulation of the noncanonical D-amino acid D-isoleucine was an interesting outcome. The strain specific metabolic footprint points to noteworthy differences in the biochemical system of both strains. Moreover, this study demonstrates the impact of the cultivation medium on the metabolic status of bacterial cells. Due to increasing resistance against a large number of antibiotics, community- and hospital- acquired infections with S. aureus are of major concern in medical therapy. Thus, greater knowledge about adaptive mechanisms after antibiotic treatment is required. In article III, the response of S. aureus HG001 to antibiotics with varying target sides, such as ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, fosfomycin, vancomycin, and ampicillin, was investigated on the metabolite level. Thereby, the abundances of 176 intracellular metabolites were observed in a time-dependent manner, thus providing the most comprehensive experimental metabolite dataset so far available for S. aureus. None of the antibiotic compounds led to alterations of single metabolite amounts, but mostly entire metabolic pathways were affected. The intermediates of the cell wall biosynthesis were affected by each antibiotic, confirming this pathway as the most potential target for new antibacterial compounds. The metabolite composition of human nasal secretions and human sweat was analyzed, since such secretions present natural habitats of S. aureus during the colonization of typical host sides. The results confirm that the bacteria has to cope with low concentrations of most of the amino acids but large amounts of urea and lactate during host colonization. Considering the supply of amino acids, the results support the usage of the RPMI 1640 medium as a step to more in vivo-like cultivation experiments. Moreover, essential information for future studies about the adaptation of S. aureus to more in vivo growth conditions is provided. Altogether, the metabolomic approach was proven to be an important tool for helping unravel the complex bacterial metabolism and the environmental factors that also play a role in the virulence of Staphylococcus aureus.
Accelerated drug release tests are essential for quality control (QC) of long acting (non-oral) controlled release formulations. Real-time release experiments are usually required for product development, to understand the mechanism of release and to establish a correlation with in vivo release. Ideally, the accelerated test should maintain the biorelevant aspect of the in vitro method and the mechanism of release should not change under accelerated test conditions. At the same time adequate discriminatory ability is a prerequisite as the accelerated test should be able to discriminate between batches with respect to manufacturing variables that can impact on bioavailability. The objective of this thesis was to develop accelerated drug release tests for intravaginal rings (IVRs) and to gain a mechanistic understanding of the principles that facilitate in vitro drug release under accelerated test conditions. A detailed evaluation of the in vitro release characteristics of the formulations under real-time test conditions was considered as a prerequisite for developing predictive accelerated tests. Two formulations were subject of this study, in which the mechanism of release is primarily governed by drug diffusion. One formulation was the commercially available Nuvaring®, a combined hormonal contraceptive IVR that releases etonogestrel and ethinylestradiol with a constant rate over a duration of 3 weeks. The second formulation was a prototype of an investigational IVR that is supposed to be bioequivalent to the marketed formulation. The Nuvaring® provides an example of a reservoir system in which a membrane mediates diffusion, resulting in release rates that are almost constant with time, whereas the investigational IVR is a matrix-type IVR. In these devices drug release is driven by Fickian diffusion through a homogeneous matrix and decays with time. Both IVRs are based on different grades of polyethylene vinyl acetate (PEVA). Accelerated drug release tests were performed at elevated temperature and in hydro-organic solvents since these two parameters were expected to increase drug diffusion through the semicrystalline EVA copolymer. Release experiments with IVRs or endcapped segments were performed in an incubator shaker. The devices were placed in stoppered flasks containing an adequate release medium that was continuously shaken and completely replaced at predetermined time points. Release experiments with endcapped segments were also performed in a small volume version of UPS apparatus 7 (the Reciprocating Holder). Results from release experiments in these two setups were in general comparable when the release from segments was standardized to release per ring with respect to the mass ratio (segment/IVR). Real-time drug release in an aqueous release medium at a temperature of 37 °C from the Nuvaring® was slightly affected by variations in the in vitro test conditions, i.e. media volume and composition (addition of solubility enhancing agents). These variations, however, did not affect the release kinetics that continued to be zero-order with exception of the initial burst. In contrast, real-time drug release from the matrix IVR was affected by the steroid solubility in the release medium, increased with increasing media volume and reached a maximum in release media containing solubility enhancing agents, resulting in distinct release kinetics. Interestingly the steroid solubility had a distinct influence on the release rate under conditions that are commonly assumed to provide sink conditions. Even under experimental conditions that provided minimum drug solubility, the concentration of ethinylestradiol in the receptor medium never exceeded 3 % of the saturation solubility. Accelerated drug release from both IVRs could be observed after exposure to elevated temperature and/or hydro-organic release media. Overall, increased drug release in different hydro-organic media correlated with polymer swelling. The higher swelling capacity of the investigational IVR, when compared with the Nuvaring®, was accounted for a stronger degree of acceleration in different hydro-organic release media. These observations were in agreement with literature sources that report that swelling as well as diffusivity in EVA copolymers increases with increasing VA content, which is lower in the rate-controlling membrane of the Nuvaring®. For the investigational IVR a good correlation between accelerated and real-time release profiles could be obtained if changes in steroid solubility under accelerated conditions were taken into consideration. For example, a good correlation could be observed between accelerated release profiles in hydro-organic media and real-time release profiles in media containing surfactants that provide maximum drug solubility and thus eliminate boundary layer effects. This observation appears reasonable since hydro-alcoholic release media also enhance steroid solubility in the receptor compartment. In case of the Nuvaring® variations in the in vitro test parameters under real-time test conditions did not affect the release kinetics. For this IVR, the mechanism of release was maintained in hydro-organic release media and at elevated temperature. The quantitative relationship between the zero-order release constants and the test temperature could be described by the Arrhenius equation, indicating that accelerated release is governed by an increase in drug diffusion. Validation of the accelerated method with a prototype of the investigational IVR with a different drug load demonstrated that the accelerated methods were able to detect formulation changes with similar discriminatory ability as the real-time test. However, the temperature-controlled accelerated method was less sensitive to detect changes in the release characteristics of a Nuvaring® that have been induced by preliminary heat-treatment, indicating that the accelerated method may be less sensitive to detect changes in IVRs that are a result of physical aging. When the aim is to develop an accelerated method for batch release it is therefore crucial to validate the accelerated method with appropriate samples from non-conforming batches that are out of specification under real-time test conditions and have been obtained by small but deliberate variations in the critical process parameters. In both formulations the degree of acceleration could be further increased by combining the effect of hydro-organic release media with an increase in temperature. Under these test conditions the ability to differentiate between the different prototypes of the investigational IVR was maintained. Moreover, in both IVRs the mechanism of release was not affected by an additional increase in temperature when compared with release profiles in hydro-organic solvents. In conclusion, the results of this study indicate that both temperature and hydro-organic release media are valid parameters to accelerate drug release from delivery systems in which the mechanism of release is primarily governed by diffusion through dense (inert) polymer matrices (i.e. inserts, implants). A correlation between real time and accelerated release will be facilitated if drug release under real-time test conditions is independent of the test parameters. To assure the outcome of the test with respect to quality and safety it is crucial to validate the accelerated method with appropriate batches.
In this thesis several methods of protein engineering were applied to explore and increase enantioselectivity and thermostability of certain carboxylesterases and to better understand the relationship between sequence, structure and function. For example, we were able to confirm the observed conservation of motifs like GX/GGGX and GXSXG, which was reported earlier. Yet, even more details were revealed and some were designated in numbers. However, the numbers may vary when even more sequences will be available, but the trend should remain the same. The power of the ABHDB lies in the information available throughout the very diverse and quite large superfamily. Structural equal positions can be easily compared and analysed regarding mutations, correlated mutations, prevalence etc., and visualization is simplified through direct output with YASARA software. The ABHDB was the first structural alignment of such a large number of known enzymes of the alpha/beta-hydrolase fold superfamily. With methods of rational protein engineering we were able to show that there is little flexibility of the GGG(A)X motif for the eukaryotic enzyme PLE 1 and the natural motif appears to be a good solution for high activity and enantioselectivity of PLE 1 in the conversion of tertiary alcohol esters. In a focused directed evolution approach, we were able to identify variants of BsteE with moderate, but significantly increased enantioselectivity in the kinetic resolution of tetrahydrofuran-3-yl acetate, and hence, were able to proof that the concept of ‘small but smart’ libraries is an efficient way to find improved mutants, while the screening effort was reduced. Moreover, we were able to show that the domain exchange enhanced the thermostability of BsubE, while expression level and activity were maintained or increased, respectively. Despite the great achievements and possibilities at present, we are not yet in the position to directly modify the gene to alter the structure in a complete predictable fashion to improve functional properties as imagined by Ulmer (1983). Nevertheless, substantial changes can be targeted and as demonstrated in this work, several broadly applicable methods are at hand. Furthermore, bioinformatics tools play an essential role in planning of experiments, analysis and interpretation.
In the search for new antifungal agents, this study dealt with the antimicrobial screening, extraction, isolation, structural elucidation as well as selective biological investigations of the isolated compounds. In addition, the impact of the culture conditions on growth and on biosynthesis of bioactive compounds was also studied. Besides, selective cyanobacteria were axenized and the taxonomy as well as the genetic relationship of axenic cyanobacteria that produced bioactive compounds with some other cyanobacteria was identified basing on the 16S rRNA gene sequences. 22 Vietnamese and 6 German cyanobacterial strains were screened for their antifungal activity using the agar diffusion assay. Among them, the MeOH/water extract from the biomass obtained from a laboratory culture of strain Bio 33, isolated from the Baltic Sea near Rügen Island, exhibited a specific antifungal activity against Candida maltosa and others human pathogenous fungi such as Candida albicans, Candida krusei, Aspergillus fumigatus, Microsporum gypseum, Trichophyton rubrum and Mucor sp. Besides, it was very impressed that extracts of strain Bio 33 showed no antibacterial activity against Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Bacillus subtilis, and Staphylococcus aureus. The taxonomy basing on 16S rRNA gene sequence of the axenic Bio 33 identified this strain as Anabaena cylindrica species. As a result of the bioassay-guided fractionation of the crude MeOH/water extract, four new lipopeptides, named balticidins A – D, were isolated. These lipopeptides represent a new structural type with the co-occurrence of a glycosylated cyclic peptide, a fatty acid containing chlorine and a disaccharide moiety. The main active fraction isolated from the MeOH/water extract of the biomass of Bio 33 which contains the four lipopeptides exhibited only marginal cytotoxic activity against the human bladder carcinoma cell line 5637 (IC50 = 93 μg/ml). The weak cytotoxic activity and the absence of antibacterial effects in the used in vitro test systems opens a promising future for further investigations to clarify the antifungal mechanism and for in vivo applications of the new lipopeptides. Different media, temperature, light intensity and period of irradiance, the depletion of nitrate and the trace element cobalt were investigated to figure out conditions at which Bio 33 produces maximum of balticidins under laboratory conditions. Temperature was the most apparent factor influencing the growth of Bio 33 and the production of balticidins. Bio 33 grew best in BG 11 medium plus 0.5% NaCl at 26°C, under white fluorescent continuous light and a light intensity of 20 μmol photons m-2 s-1. Nevertheless, under the same conditions, 22.5°C was the best temperature for the production of balticidins. Besides, harvesting of Bio 33 during the logarithmic growth phase, particularly at 20th day, should supply approximately maximum quantity of balticidins. At 22.5°C and 20 μmol photons m-2 s-1 under 24 h continuous irradiance, the depletion of nitrate had no negative effect on the growth and concentration of balticidin A but increased balticidin B and decreased balticidin C; the absence of cobalt slightly decreased the growth but had no clear effect on the production of balticidins. On the other hand, extracts of the culture medium of the Vietnamese cyanobacterium TVN40, exhibited antifungal activity against Candida maltosa and weak antibacterial activity. Extraction of the culture medium with XAD-16 and elution of the XAD-bounded compounds by different solvents resulted in five fractions (water, 80% MeOH, 100% MeOH, acetone, dichloromethan). Four compounds have been isolated from the 80% MeOH fraction and one was identified as a dioxindole derivative. Structural elucidation of the other three compounds is still in progress. TVN40 was formerly identified as an Anabaena sp. according to the morphological properties, but the 16S rRNA gene sequence confirms that the strain belongs to the genus Nostoc. Microscopic examination of TVN40 revealed that the filamentous strain was not a unialgal but a mixed culture with strange round cells (SRCs) - a unicellular cyanobacterium belonging to the order Chroococcales. Laboratory cultures of the pure filamentous strain TVN40, the isolated SRCs and the mixed culture of both strains were established. Both TVN40 and SRC culture media were responsible for the antibacterial activity against B. subtilis, S. aureus and E. coli. However, only the extract of the culture medium of TVN40 was active against C. maltosa. The supplement of cobalt enhanced the antimicrobial activity of the culture medium. Pure strains showed higher activity in comparison to the mixed culture of TVN40 and SRC.
Oral drug delivery is the preferred route of administration for the majority of drugs. Solid dosage forms arewell-accepted because of ease of administration, accurate dosing and high degree of patient compliance. The orodispersible technology platform has attracted increasing interest. Fast disintegrating in the mouth before swallowing, orodispersible dosage forms like orodispersible tablets (ODTs) address the need for patient-compliant medicines. ODTs represent a convenient alternative to conventional tablets or capsules. ODTs are an interesting approach when a rapid onset of therapeutic action is important. So far, ODTs have often been considered as an innovative variant of conventional oral solid dosage forms. Still, the development of ODT formulations is typically assisted by compendial in vitro test methods. However, the techniques described in international pharmacopoeias are non-specific for ODTs. After administration, the dispersion of an ODT in the mouth may provide effects which might influence the absorption of the drug. The performance of ODTs is more comparable to solutions/suspensions than to traditional tablets. To better guide the development of a new ODT formulation, this lack needs to be addressed. It is the aim of this work to design more specific in vitro test methods helping to improve understanding ODT formulations. To reflect the physiological conditions experienced by an ODT after administration, particular attention was given to the mouth where the ODT disperses and releases the drug before swallowing. In vitro biorelevant test setups simulating in vivo conditions were designed. An electronic tongue system was used to assess taste properties of ODTs. These test methods were applied in different stages of the ODT formulation development. Diclofenac being a poorly soluble and weakly acidic NSAID which is a standard medication for acute painful inflammatory conditions was used as a drug model. Three forms, i.e. the free acid and its sodium/potassium salt, were investigated for the formulation of palatable and fast acting ODTs. In Chapter 1, the development of biorelevant test setup reflecting the physiological conditions experienced by ODTs is described in detail. The newly-designed in vitro models successfully discriminated the different diclofenac forms in successive in vitro compartments simulating the mouth, the stomach and the small intestine. It was possible to identify peculiar dissolution profiles with diclofenac salts. Characterizing in-depth the diclofenac free acid and salt particles provided a better understanding of the peculiar dissolution profiles. Critical behaviors of diclofenac salts on their way from the mouth to the stomach and passing different pH conditions were extensively evaluated. Reasons for pH-dependent API precipitation and particle agglomeration were studied in detail. In pre-formulation studies, the proposed biorelevant test setups succeeded in helping to early identify critical pharmaceutical properties for diclofenac salts and to select diclofenac free acid as the most appropriate drug form providing the most stable in vitro performance. In Chapter 2, the electronic tongue method as an in vitro taste assessment tool for ODTs is proposed. Using the TS-5000Z taste sensing system (Insent Inc., Japan), the method was able to differentiate between the taste/aftertaste qualities and intensities of the three diclofenac candidates. The electronic tongue was also successfully used to differentiate different ODT formulations. The results obtained proved that valuable information can be gained. By this means, the taste perception of the diclofenac drug candidates were classified and rank against each other. For manufacturing taste-masked ODTs, diclofenac free acid, could be selected easily. The electronic tongue found out to be a precious tool in assisting the development of a new ODT product and finding the most appropriate multi-component formulation. Both proposed methods successfully showed their discriminative ability and also their utility in pre-formulation studies of ODTs. In the previous chapters, it was indeed possible to early select diclofenac free acid as the most suitable drug candidate for the targeted product profile. In Chapter 3, said methods were further used to guide the development of the taste masked diclofenac ODT formulation. This study highlights the importance of considering in vitro the physiological aspects which may have an impact on the in vivo performance of ODT dosage forms. The contact of ODTs with the mouth should be simulated in vitro for a better understanding of the in vivo behavior. With feasible biorelevant in vitro dissolution methods, an optimized correlation of in vitro and in vivo results may be achieved. The proposed in vitro test methods may provide data of predictive value and may support the rational development of ODT formulations.
Chemistry and biology of Phenolics isolated from Myricaria germanica (L.) Desv. (Tamaricaceae)
(2014)
In accordance with the recent worldwide interest in plant phenolics, which emerges from their broad range of biological activities, particular emphasis has been focused, in the present thesis, on the constitutive phenolics of the extract of Myricaria germanica (L.) Desv. (Tamaricaceae). During the current thesis twenty phenolics (1 – 20) were isolated and identified from the aqueous/ethanol extract of the whole Myricaria germanica plant. The isolates include four hitherto unknown natural phenolics (2, 10, 12 and 20). Also, the cytotoxic activities of M. germanica extract, column fractions, and one new natural isolate against three different solid tumor cell lines, namely, breast cancer (MCF-7), prostate (PC-3), and liver (Huh-7) cancer cell using SRB viability assay have been investigated and first insights into mode of action have been obtained.
Metabolomics is the scientific study of metabolites of an organism, cell, or tissue. Metabolomics makes use of different analytical approaches. In this thesis, an analytical platform consisting of proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-NMR), gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS, EI/quadrupol) and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS, ESI/TOF) was used for metabolite analysis. Due to the high physicochemical diversity of metabolites, the usage of different analytics is profitable. Focusing on metabolome analysis of microorganisms, the development of viable protocols was prerequisite. To ensure metabolome samples of best possible quality, particularly the sampling procedure has to be optimized for each microorganism to be analyzed individually. In microbial metabolomics, the energy charge value is a commonly used parameter to assure high sample quality (Atkinson 1968). The pathogenic bacterium Staphylococcus aureus and the biotechnical relevant bacterium Bacillus subtilis were main target of research. The sampling protocol development “A protocol for the investigation of the intracellular Staphylococcus aureus metabolome” (Meyer et al. 2010) and “Methodological approaches to help unravel the intracellular metabolome of Bacillus subtilis”s (Meyer et al. 2013) confirmed the need for development and verification of viable protocols. It was observed, that minor differences in the sampling procedure can cause major differences in sample quality. Using the validated analytical platform and the optimized protocols, we were able to investigate the metabolome of S. aureus and B. subtilis under different conditions. Investigations of the pathogenic bacterium S. aureus are of major interest due to its increasing resistance to antibiotics. Methicillin (multi)-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) strains are responsible for several difficult-to-treat infections. The cell wall of bacteria is the target of an array of antibiotics, like the beta-lactam antibiotics. Our study “A metabolomic view of Staphylococcus aureus and Its Ser/Thr kinase and phosphatase deletion mutants: Involvement in cell wall biosynthesis” (Liebeke et al. 2010) revealed the influence of the serine-threonine kinase on cell wall biosynthesis of S. aureus. LC-MS based metabolome data uncovered prevalent wall teichoic acid precursors in the serine-threonine kinase deletion mutant (ΔpknB), and predominantly peptidoglycan precursors in the phosphatase deletion mutant (Δstp), compared to the S. aureus wild type strain 8325. This uncovered a so far undescribed importance of the serine-threonine kinase on the cell wall metabolism and provides new insights into its regulation. The nasopharynx and the human skin are often the ecological niche of S. aureus. Furthermore, S. aureus exists outside its host, for example on catheters. Depending on its niche, S. aureus is exposed to several stress factors and limitation conditions, such as carbon source limitation and starvation. To cope with the latter, a number of regulatory cellular processes take place. In “Life and death of proteins: a case study of glucose-starved Staphylococcus aureus” (Michalik et al. 2012) protein degradation during glucose starvation was monitored. An intriguing observation was that proteins involved in branch chain amino acid biosynthesis and purine nucleotide biosynthesis were distinctly down-regulated in the clpP mutant. This lead to the assumption of a stronger repression of CodY-dependent genes in the clpP mutant. Intracellular metabolome data revealed higher GTP concentrations in the clpP mutant. This may explain the higher CodY activity and thereby stronger repression of CodY-dependent genes in the clpP mutant. Since different S. aureus strains are known to colonize different niches, global carbon source (glucose, glucose 6-phosphate, glycerol, lactate, lactose and a mixture of all) and carbon source limitation dependent exo-metabolome analyses were performed using three different S. aureus strains (HG001: laboratory strain, EN493: human endocarditis isolate and RF122: bovine mastitis strain). The most apparent observation was that RF122 can utilize lactose best, while EN493 and HG001 are better at utilizing glucose-6-phosphate compared to the bovine RF122 strain. Bacillus subtilis is an extensively studied Gram-positive and non-pathogenic bacterium. In the functional genomics approach “System-wide temporal proteomics profiling in glucose-starved Bacillus subtilis” (Otto et al. 2010) growth phase dependent changes in the proteome, transcriptome and extracellular metabolome were monitored. By mass spectrometric analysis of five different cellular subfractions, ~ 52% of the predicted proteins could be identified. To confirm and complete the proteomic data transcriptome and extracellular metabolome analyses were performed. The extracellular metabolome data ensured that cells were glucose-starved and revealed growth phase dependent metabolic footprints. In “A time resolved metabolomics study: The influence of different carbon sources during growth and starvation of Bacillus subtilis” ((Meyer et al. 2013) submitted) four different compounded cultivation media were investigated as only glucose, glucose and malate, glucose and fumarate and glucose and citrate as carbon source. It could be shown, that B. subtilis is able to maintain an intracellular metabolite homeostasis independent of the available carbon source. On the other hand, in the exo-metabolome, carbon source as well as growth phase dependent differences were detected. Furthermore, in this study the influence of ATP and GTP on the activation of the alternative RNA polymerase sigma factor B (σB) was discussed. The concentration of ATP and GTP decreased for all conditions, as cells entered the stationary growth phase. While cell growth on solely glucose and during growth on glucose and additional malate, the ATP and GTP concentrations increased slightly when the consumption of the second carbon source was initiated. Only under these conditions, a considerable σB activity increase during the transition from exponential to stationary growth phase was observed. Furthermore, the developed sampling protocol for metabolome analysis of B. subtilis enabled us to be part of a “multi omics” system biological approach to study the physiological adjustment of B. subtilis to cope with osmotic stress under chemostat conditions.
Non-thermal atmospheric pressure plasma has drawn more and more attention to the field of wound healing research during the last two decades. It is characterized by a unique composition, which includes amongst others free radicals, ions and electrons. Furthermore, non-thermal plasma exhibits temperatures that are below those inducing thermal cell damage. Next to its well-established anti-bacterial properties, plasma can have lethal as well as stimulating effects on mammalian cells. Therefore, the medical application of non-thermal plasma on chronic wounds seems to be a promising tool to enable healing processes. However, less is known about the plasma-mediated induction of intracellular signaling pathways in human immune cells, which play a leading part in the process of wound recovery and removal of pathogens. Therefore, this thesis examined the cellular effects of a non-thermal atmospheric pressure plasma treatment on human immune cells using the argon plasma jet kinpen 09. Here, the CD4+ T helper cell line Jurkat, the monocyte cell line THP-1 as well as the corresponding primary cells were investigated. First, cell survival and apoptosis induction was assessed in response to non-thermal plasma treatment by growth curves and flow cytometric assays. On the one hand it could be shown that primary cells are more susceptible to plasma treatment than the respective cell lines. On the other hand, monocytes responded less sensitive to plasma exposure than lymphocytes. Furthermore, this thesis outlined the impact of non-thermal plasma treatment on the gene expression level of immune cells. Therefore, DNA microarray analysis was performed with the cell lines Jurkat and THP-1. It became obvious that plasma exposure modulated the expression of several genes in both cell types. Differential expression of distinct target genes was further validated by quantitative PCR in the immune cell lines. Here, elevated gene expression levels of JUN and FOS in Jurkat cells and increased transcription of JUND in THP-1 cells in response to plasma treatment were made visible. JUN, FOS and JUND are components of the transcription factor AP-1, which is involved amongst others in gene expression of IL-8 and HMOX-1. Consequently, transcriptional induction of the inflammatory cytokine IL-8 as well as the enzymes HMOX-1 and GSR was detected in plasma-treated THP-1 cells. In addition, alterations in the protein activation levels were analyzed in plasma-treated Jurkat, THP-1 cells and primary monocytes. Since some of the identified target genes are known to be associated with the MAPK pathways, the regulation of these cascades was further investigated by western blot analysis. In all investigated cell types the pro-proliferative signaling molecules ERK 1/2 and MEK 1/2 as well as the pro-apoptotic signaling proteins p38 MAPK and JNK 1/2 were activated in a plasma treatment time dependent manner. In contrast to Jurkat and primary monocytes, the anti-apoptotic HSP27 was only induced in THP-1 cells in response to plasma exposure. Moreover, modulation of cytokine production and secretion was examined in the different immune cell types and co-cultured THP-1 and HaCaT keratinocytes by ELISA or flow cytometry. While Jurkat cells showed no plasma-mediated regulation of cytokine expression, THP-1 cells revealed an increased IL-8 secretion after long plasma time duration (360 s). Additionally, the intracellular expression levels of IL-6 and IL-8 were modulated in primary monocytes by plasma exposure. While short plasma treatment caused no alteration of the number of cells expressing IL-8 an up-regulation of the intracellular IL-6 level occurred after 30 s of plasma treatment. Long plasma treatment times resulted in a significant decrease of the intracellular IL-8 and IL-6 production levels. Furthermore, co-cultured THP-1 and HaCaT cells as well as mono-cultured THP-1 and HaCaT cells were examined regarding their cytokine secretion profile. Here, cells treated with plasma (180 s) as well as LPS and plasma (180 s and LPS) were compared with untreated cells. IL-6, IL-8 and GM-CSF secretion was induced by both plasma and plasma combined with LPS treatment in mono-cultivated HaCaT cells and co-cultured cells. Though, the highest cytokine secretion levels were reached in the plasma and LPS exposed co-culture. In contrast, mono-cultivated THP-1 cells only showed an increased secretion of IL-6, IL-8 and TNFa after incubation with plasma together with LPS exposed medium. In conclusion, this study revealed for the first time the non-thermal plasma-modulated expression of numerous genes and cytokines and the activation state of various signaling cascades in human immune cells. Thus, it contributes to gain a better understanding of the immune-modulatory impacts of plasma that might promote the wound healing process.
The aim of this work is to further analyze the nature of the TiO2 passivation layer regarding structure, hydrophilicity and adsorption behavior, starting with the question how far metal and oxide properties are affected by the contact, regarding structural relaxation, atomic charges and work function. This determines how far the influence of metal has to be considered in simulations of TiO2 passivation layers. Mimicking the initial phases of implant contact with the biological environment, the adsorption of the inorganic ions on titanium oxides is to be investigated next, especially the influence of Ca2+ and HnPO4n-3 on the surface properties. Finally, biomolecule adsorption on TiO2 surfaces is investigated for understanding and improving their bioactivity.
Titanium and Titanium Dioxide
The properties of sharp interfaces formed between metallic titanium and a titanium dioxide layer with rutile or anatase structure and four different surface terminations were investigated. In all cases the work of separation is higher than the sum of surface energies, indicating the formation of an energetically very favorable interface region that glues the two phases together. The interface energy is negative, which means that for Ti and TiO2 bulk phases, mixing is energetically favorable.
The influence of the metal on the atomic and electronic structure of the oxide is limited to a few atomic layers. Depending on its modification, a passivation layer may give rise to up- (rutile) or downshift (anatase) of the work function of the underlying titanium metal.
Calcium and Phosphate
First principles molecular dynamics simulations in vacuum revealed stable bonds between Ca2+ and HnPO4n-3 ions and the investigated TiO2 surfaces. Ca2+ ions bind to 2–4 surface oxygen atoms, preferring peripheral positions as found on both rutile surfaces where adsorption energies reach 9 eV per ion. In solution the hydration energy drastically reduces these values.
Phosphate adsorbs to the TiO2 surface, but the adsorption energy is much lower than that of Ca2+ ions. The approach of phosphate is highly orientation dependent and hampered by the terminal oxygen atoms.
Both ab initio and force field simulations indicate enrichment of Ca2+ ions close to the surface, most of them directly bound to it, which results in a net positive charge. As the adsorption of phosphate takes longer and is strongly reinforced by adsorbed Ca2+ ions, it has become obvious that Ca2+ ions initiate the adsorption of calcium phosphate clusters to titania surfaces. However, the TiO2 surface does not necessarily act as a nucleation site for calcium phosphate crystallization, as adsorbed Ca2+ ions show reduced affinity towards phosphate compared to free ions in solution.
Collagen and Mechanical Stress
Coinciding force distance relations have been obtained for a variety of restraint force constants, expansion rates and environments. The resulting Young’s moduli are in the range of experimental values both at low and high strain ranges. For low strains the calculated Young’s modulus of about 2 GPa is comparable to experimental values between 3 and 5 GPa. For high strains it reaches 10 GPa. The Young’s moduli can be assigned to three different mechanisms of stretching, affecting the macroscopic linearity, the torsional angles and the bond lengths.
Chondroitin Sulfate (CS) and Hyaluronic Acid (HA)
A force field model for CS and HA could be established that reproduced experimental torsion angles and showed the same free energy surface (FES) as an ab initio model. Hydration affects the overall FES, but does not alter the position of the energetic minima. Stabilization of the conformation via bridging water molecules as suggested by other works is not necessary.
Both glycosaminoglycans adsorb to a hydroxylated rutile (100) surfaces despite the negative net charge both on surface and adsorbate. The presence of Na + ions is enough to compensate for the negative surface charge and to allow for adsorption. Ca2+ ions form additional bridges between negative groups on the surface and in the adsorbate.
Surface and electrode modifications allow the alteration of surface and electrode properties required for certain applications. In the first part of this thesis, a pH sensitive graphite/quinhydrone composite electrode for Flow-Injection-Analysis (FIA) systems was optimized by using polysiloxane as binder material. This allows an easier handling of the electrode. Furthermore, new applications of the FIA system in conjunction with the pH sensitive detection system were developed. The electrode used here in conjunction with a common reference electrode proved to be a very useful potentiometric detector for FIA acid-base titrations of aqueous solutions. Even acid-base titrations in buffered solutions were performed successfully with the FIA system allowing the determination of activities of enzymes, which catalyse reactions with increasing or decreasing proton concentrations. A FIA system was applied to measure calcium and magnesium ions in different water samples by measuring the hydronium ion release during the complexometric reaction between EDTA and calcium or magnesium ions. A method was established to determine sequentially the titratable acidity and the pH of different wine samples. The new FIA method fulfils the official requirements of the "Organisation Internationale de la Vigne et du Vin" with respect to reproducibility and repeatability and can be easily adjusted to the legal requirements in USA and Europe. In summary, the first part of this thesis shows that the FIA system in conjunction with the graphite/quinhydrone/polysiloxane composite electrode is very well suited for simple, rapid and automatic determinations of small sample volumes in the areas of water analysis, food analysis or even biochemical analysis, provided that hydronium ions are involved. For all applications, one and the same measuring device without changing the detection system is used. Only different carrier solutions are necessary, which can be provided by a proper stream selector. The second part of this thesis is focused on the modification of gold surfaces of medical devices by treatment with OH radicals. These investigations are based on previous studies of the impact of OH radicals on mechanically polished gold surfaces resulting in a smoothing of the surface by dissolution of highly reactive gold atoms. In this thesis, the effect of OH radicals, generated either ex vivo by Fenton solutions or in vivo by immune reactions, on gold implants was analysed using atomic force microscopy. It was found that there is an analogy between the exposure of gold to Fenton solutions and the exposure of gold to immune reactions. The pre-treatment of gold implants with OH radicals of Fenton solution prevents surface alterations of the gold implants in vivo. This indicates that the in vivo release of gold from implants can be reduced by exposing the gold implants to Fenton solution before implantation. Finally, the modification of gold surfaces by OH radicals was applied to a medical nanodetector, which is coated with a gold layer and functionalized with antibodies, for isolating circulating tumour cells (CTCs) from the blood stream of cancer patients. By treating the gold layer of the nanodetector with OH radicals generated by Fenton solution or by UV-photolysis of hydrogen peroxide, the cytotoxicity of the gold layer after gamma irradiation was reduced to almost zero. This modification of the gold surface with OH radicals allows applying the nanodetector for in vivo applications.
The focus of the first two articles was the engineering and application of enzymes for the conversion of the bio-based resources glycerol and its oxidation product glyceraldehyde for the production of the value added product glyceric acid. Article III focuses on the cloning, exploration and engineering of a polyol dehydrogenase, which later on was used as cofactor recycling system in order to produce ε-caprolactone from cyclohexanol as presented in arti-cle IV. The following paragraphs will give a short outline of each article. ARTICLE I: ASYMMETRIC SYNTHESIS OF D-GLYCERIC ACID BY AN ALDITOL OXIDASE AND DIRECTED EVOLUTION FOR ENHANCED OXIDATIVE ACTIVITY TOWARDS GLYCEROL. GERSTENBRUCH, S., WULF, H., MUßMANN, N., O’CONNELL, T., MAURER, K.-H. & BORNSCHEUER, U. T. (2012). Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 96, 1243-1252. The alditol oxidase of Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) (AldO) was used to catalyze the oxida-tion of glycerol to glyceraldehyde and glyceric acid. The enantioselectivity for the FAD-de-pendent glycerol oxidation was elucidated and different strategies were used to enhance the substrate specificity towards glycerol. Directed evolution by error-prone PCR led to an AldO double mutant with 1.5-fold improved activity for glycerol. Further improvement of activity was achieved by combination of mutations, leading to a quadruple mutant with 2.4-fold higher specific activity towards glycerol compared to the wild-type enzyme. In small-scale biotransformation concentrations up to 2.0 g•l-1 D-glyceric acid could be reached using whole cells. Investi¬gation of the effects of the introduced mutations led to a further identification of es¬sential amino acids with respect to enzyme functionality and structural stability. ARTICLE II: KINETIC RESOLUTION OF GLYCERALDEHYDE USING AN ALDEHYDE DEHYDROGENASE FROM DEINOCOCCUS GEOTHERMALIS DSM 11300 COMBINED WITH ELECTROCHEMICAL COFACTOR RECYCLING. WULF, H., PERZBORN, M., SIEVERS, G., SCHOLZ, F. & BORNSCHEUER, U. T. (2012). J. Mol. Catal. B Enzym. 74, 144-150. Two aldehyde dehydrogenases (ALDH) from Escherichia coli BL21 and Deinococcus geother-malis were cloned, characterized and evaluated according to their applicability for a bio-catalysis setup with electrolytic cofactor recycling. Both ALDHs turned out to have a sim¬ilar substrate scope and favor short to medium chain aldehydes and both oxidize glyceralde¬hyde to D-glyceric acid. The ALDH variant of D. geothermalis shows higher specific activity towards glyceraldehyde and has an elevated optimum temperature compared to the BL21 enzyme. Due to the higher specific activity of the ALDH of D. geothermalis, this enzyme was used to conduct a kinetic resolution of glyceraldehyde with electrolytic NAD+ recycling at a glassy carbon foam electrode with ABTS as redox mediator yielding in 1.8 g•l-1 glyceric acid. ARTICLE III: PROTEIN ENGINEERING OF A THERMOSTABLE POLYOL DEHYDROGENASE. WULF, H.*, MALLIN, H.*, BORNSCHEUER U.T. (2012). Enzyme Microb. Technol. 51, 217-224 (*equally contributed). The new enzyme polyol dehydrogenase PDH-11300 from D. geothermalis was extensively characterized regarding its temperature optimum and thermostability. A peptide stretch responsible for substrate recognition from the PDH-11300 was substituted by this particular stretch of a homolog enzyme, the galactitol dehydrogenase from Rhodobacter sphaeroides (PDH-158), resulting in a chimeric enzyme (PDH-loop). The substrate scopes were deter-mined and basically the chimeric enzyme represented the average of both wild-type en-zymes. A rather unexpected finding was the notably increased T5060, by 7°C to 55.3°C, and an increased specific activity against cyclohexanol. Finally, the cofactor specificity was suc¬cess-fully altered from NADH to NADPH by an Asp55Asn mutation, which is located at the NAD+ binding cleft, without influencing the catalytic properties of the dehydrogenase. ARTICLE IV: A SELF-SUFFICIENT BAEYER-VILLIGER BIOCATALYSIS SYSTEM FOR THE SYNTHESIS OF Ɛ-CAPROLACTONE FROM CYCLOHEXANOL. MALLIN, H. *, WULF, H. *, BORNSCHEUER U.T. (2013). Enzyme Microb. Technol., online, DOI: 10.1016/j.enzmictec.2013.01.007 (*equally contributed). The application of the engineered PDH-loopN mutant [1] (Article III) for the production of ε-caprolactone from cyclohexanol was investigated in a co-immobilization approach with the cyclohexanone monooxygenase from Acinetobacter calcoaceticus. Biotransformation with solubilized enzymes led to an isolated yield of 55% pure ε-caprolactone with no residual cy-clohexanol to be detected. During the immobilization experiments a higher enzyme ratio in favor of the CHMO led to higher reaction velocities. Similarly, the addition of soluble fresh CHMO during reuse of co-immobilization batches significantly increased the activity identi-fying the CHMO as the bottleneck in this reaction setup.
The biological decontamination and sterilization is a crucial processing step in producing and reprocessing of medical devices. Since polymer-based materials are increasingly used for the production of medical devices, the application of conventional sterilization processes are restricted to a certain extent. Conventional sterilization techniques on the basis of high temperatures, toxic gases, or ionizing radiation can be detrimental to the functionality and performance of polymeric materials. For this reason, alternative, gentle, and efficient decontamination processes are required. One possible approach is the use of non-thermal physical plasmas. Especially atmospheric pressure plasma is receiving great interest due to the absence of vacuum systems which is highly attractive for the practical applicability. Its mechanisms of action enable the efficient killing and inactivation of micro-organisms which are attributed to the interaction of plasma-generated reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS, RNS) as well as plasma-emitted (V)UV radiation. Owing to the moderate gas temperatures (near or at room temperature) so-called cold plasmas are well-suitable for the treatment of heat-sensitive materials, such as polymers, without affecting their bulk properties. The present work focuses on the investigation of atmospheric pressure plasma processes for the biological decontamination of polymers. The objective is to help elucidate on the one hand the impact of varied plasma process parameters on the inactivation of micro-organisms and on the other hand the influence of plasma on the surface properties of the substrate. The investigations were performed by means of a high-frequency driven plasma jet (from the product line kINPen) operated with argon and argon-oxygen mixtures. Three main aspects were analyzed: 1. The effect of plasma on the viability of micro-organisms dependent on working gas, treatment time, and the sample distance (distance between the jet nozzle and the substrate). 2. The plasma-based removal of microbial biofilms. 3. The effects of the plasma treatment on the surface properties of selected polymers. Additionally to the capability of the applied plasma jet in killing microbes the efficacy of this plasma jet for the removal of complex biological systems (e.g. biofilms) is shown. To model cell constituents of bacteria different synthetic polymers were chosen to gain insight into the decomposition process responsible for biofilm degradation. By investigating the impact of atmospheric pressure plasma on physico-chemical surface properties of various synthetic aliphatic and aromatic polymers the interaction mechanisms between plasma and plasma-exposed material are discussed. These studies are accompanied by applying different optical plasma diagnostic techniques (optical emission spectroscopy and two-photon absorption laser induced fluorescence spectroscopy) to obtain information on the plasma gas phase which contributes to the elucidation of the reaction mechanisms occurring during plasma exposure. Moreover, it is presented to which extent the plasma treatment influences the surface properties of polymers during the plasma-based bio-decontamination process and further, the benefits of surface-functionalized polymers for biomedical application is discussed.
In this thesis, all three BVMOs from Pseudomonas putida NCIMB10007, that were known to be responsible for the ability of this strain to degrade camphor since the 1950s were successfully made available as recombinant biocatalysts. While the genomic sequence of 2,5-DKCMO was available from the database, the genes encoding 3,6-DKCMO and OTEMO had to be identified using certain PCR-techniques first. All three enzymes were cloned into standard plasmids enabling convenient expression in E. coli facilitating the application of the enzymes in organic chemistry. Their synthetic potential was already reported during the 1990s, but at that time their efficient application was limited due to difficulties with respect to low production levels and insufficient purity and separation of enzyme fractions. These drawbacks are now overcome. Furthermore, biochemical characterization of the camphor-degrading BVMOs was performed including the substrate spectra of these enzymes. Thereby OTEMO turned out not only to have a broad substrate scope accepting mono- and bicyclic aliphatic and arylaliphatic ketones, but also to efficiently convert alpha/beta-unsaturated cycloalkanones due to the similarity of these compounds to OTEMOs natural substrate. Finally, the major limitation in the synthetic application of Type II BVMOs was addressed by searching a flavin-reductase suitable for coupling to these two-component oxygenases. Putative candidates from the respective P. putida strain were identified by the use of amino acid motifs conserved in other representatives of two-component systems. While these enzymes failed, flavin-reductase Fre from E. coli - that also contained the motifs - was shown to enhance the activity of the DKCMOs when applied as crude cell extract as well as pure enzyme. This finding represents a key step for future application of Type II BVMOs.
Acute pancreatitis is a common clinical inflammatory disease with variable severity from mild, self-limiting attacks to a severe lethal attack with a high mortality. In most of the cases, acute pancreatitis is either caused by gallstone obstruction or excessive alcohol consumption. Clinical symptoms include elevated levels (minimum 3 times than normal) of pancreatic enzymes such as amylase or lipase in serum. It is generally believed that earliest event in acute pancreatitis occur in acinar cells which includes premature protease activation and cytoplasmic vacuole formation. Premature trypsinogen activation has been considered as chief culprit as it can activate other proteases in a cascade like manner in acinar cells. Trypsin activity takes place in a biphasic curve with elevated levels at 1 h and 8 h in the initial stages up to 24 h in caerulein induced pancreatitis in mice. It has been shown that cytoplasmic vacuoles observed in pancreatitis are of autophagic nature. The role of autophagy for the disease onset and its role in trypsinogen is much of a debate. Hence, we studied the relation between autophagosome formation and trypsinogen activation in first 12h of pancreatitis. Although autophagosomes were found to be co-localised with trypsin in vivo, this was found to be a late event occuring only by 4 h. Substrate specific trypsin activity and western blotting from both sub-cellular fractions over the time course of pancreatitis and multiple fractions prepared from 1 h caerulein induced pancreatic tissue revealed that trypsin activity observed at 1 h occured in a zymogen enriched fraction. In line simultaneous confocal imaging of trypsin activity and autophagosome formation in hyperstimulated acini isolated from GFP-LC3 mice showed that both processes are independent and take place in parallel. Furthermore, protease inhibition by gabexate mesilate did not prevent autophagosome formation indicating that trypsinogen activation is not a prerequisite for vacuole formation. Even though, autophagosomes and active trypsin were found to be co-localised around 30 minutes to some degree upon cholecystokinin hyperstimulation, the earliest trypsin activation started to appear by 15 minutes and was independent of autophagosomes. The earliest active trypsin was found to be co-localised along with the cis-Golgi complex suggesting that the Golgi apparatus and its pre-condensed zymogen granules are the compartment responsible for the trypsinogen activation. 2) Protease activation in pancreatic acinar cells considered as the early hallmark event in the acute pancreatitis. However, the disease is aggravated by the infiltration of the leukocytes. Activated proteases mediate acinar cell injury and hereby cause the release of chemokines, which in turn attract inflammatory cells. Transmigrated inflammatory cells cause systemic damage that deteriorates the condition of the disease. Neutrophil elastase has been reported to be involved in the dissociation of cell-cell contact at adherens junctions by the extracellular cleavage of E-cadherin. This subsequently leads to transmigration of leukocytes into the epithelial tissue during the initial phase of experimental pancreatitis and aggravates the disease condition. On the other hand, pancreatic elastase substantially contributes to acinar cell necrosis. In this study, ZD0892, an orally bioavailable dual inhibitor against both elastases was tested for its efficacy to ameliorate severity in acute pancreatitis. ZD0892 orally fed mice showed increased survival compared to the control group in the taurocholate model of severe pancreatitis. In the initial stages of pancreatitis up to 24 h, the severity markers were found to be significantly lower in the inhibitor treated group. Treatment of mice with ZD0892 did not impede the defensive property of the leukocytes such as phagocytosis or oxidative burst. In caerulein induced pancreatitis, a mild form of acute pancreatitis, in rats, the local damage measured as serum amylase and lipase, wet dry ratio, and pancreatic myeloperoxidase levels were significantly lower in the inhibitor group. Systemic inflammatory parameters such as myeloperoxidase activity in lung was found to be significantly lower in the inhibitor fed rats. Inhibitor feeding resulted in lesser elastolytic activity compared to control group indicating that extracellular matrix was less damaged. Prophylactic treatment of pancreatitis with an orally available inhibitor with a dual specificity against pancreatic elastase and PMN-elastase was shown to ameliorate both local and systemic damage. Hence, in overall, ZD0892 treatment is proved to be beneficial to the mice and rats in experimental pancreatitis and should be considered for treatment in humans as the substance has been already studied in phase I and II trails for other indications.
The widespread use of natural and synthetic estrogens or chemicals with estrogenic activities is causing an increasing accumulation of estrogenic compounds in the environment. Already at very low concentrations these estrogenics can severely affect the wildlife, particularly in an aquatic environment. For these reasons measuring devices for detecting estrogen contaminations are in great demand. The majority of the analytical methods and bioassays on the market so far, lack semi-online adaptability, and usually cannot be used for automatic and continuous determination. Therefore, we have embarked on the development of new systems, which are able to fulfil those demands. The EstraMonitor combines recombinant A. adeninivorans G1212/YRC102-hERa-phyK yeast cells as the microbial component with an amperometric detection method to analyze estrogenic contaminations. A. adeninivorans G1212/YRC102-hERa-phyK was constructed by Kaiser et al. (2010). These cells were engineered to co-express the human estrogen receptor (hERa) gene and the inducible phytase (phyK, derived from Klebsiella sp. ASR1) reporter gene under control of a promoter with estrogen response elements (EREs). In the presence of estrogenic substances, such as 17ß -estradiol (E2), the phyK gene is expressed and recombinant phytase is secreted into the media. The level of phytase is quantified by amperometric detection using substrate p-aminophenyl phosphate (p-APP). Phytase dephosphorylates p-aminophenyl phosphate (p-APP) into an intermediate product p-aminophenol (p-AP). p-AP is electroactive and oxidized at the electrode. This generates electrons and produces a current which is proportional to the level of phytase activity. Since phytase activity is directly correlated to the E2 concentration, the estrogenic activity can thus be calculated from the current measured. The microbial component of the EstraMonitor, the non-immobilized A. adeninivorans G1212/YRC102-hERa-phyK, works well with the amperometric method in a quantitative manner. The optimal applied potential determined for amperometric measurements was 150 mV and provided a low background signal for the amperometric detection. The half maximal effective concentration (EC50) and limit of detection (LoD) values for E2 obtained from amperometric measurements with the EstraMonitor were 69.9 ng L-1 and 44.5 ng L-1, respectively. The measuring procedure of the EstraMonitor system including incubation of A. adeninivorans G1212/YRC102-hERa-phyK cells with E2, subsequently incubation with electrochemical substrate (p-APP), and signal recordation is completed within only 4 h and 10 min. Out of this total time, amperometric detection including substrate incubation and signals recordation takes only 10 min out of total time. The use of immobilized cells for a microbial biosensor is an essential advantage of the EstraMonitor system because it allows easy-handiness next to long-term stability and reusability. Immobilized A. adeninivorans G1212/YRC102-hERa-phyK cells revealed excellent properties which make them very suitable for semi-online, automatic and continuous monitoring. They were stable up to 30 days when stored at 4 °C. Furthermore, they could be reused up to 15 times. The EC50 and LoD values achieved for E2 using immobilized cells in combination with amperometric detection were 20.9 and 8.3 ng L-1, respectively. Furthermore, this application also removes the need to separate cells by centrifugation, to sterilize the samples as well as to cultivate repeatly. Additionally, both immobilized and non-immobilized A. adeninivorans G1212/YRC102-hERa-phyK cells remain fully functional in a wide range of untreated wastewater samples and in environments containing up to 5% NaCl. To enhance the sensitivity and reduce the time for estrogenic determination, an alternative A. adeninivorans G1214/YRC103-hERa-phyK strain was developed. This strain can produce a detectable amount of phytase within 2 h after induction with E2. It offers an improved microbial component in terms of sensitivity and time-effectiveness. In addition, to reduce the cost for estrogenic detection an alternative substrate, ascorbic acid 2-phosphate (AA2P), was tested. AA2P, which is both cheap and widely available, performed better than p-APP. The EC50 and LoD values for E2 obtained with AA2P were 15.69 and 0.92 ng L-1 versus 20.09 and 8.3 ng L-1 when examined with p-APP, respectively. Taken together, the EstraMonitor is an automated system with respect to sample cycling, sample measuring and calibration supplemented with an alarm function. This system makes it possible to control estrogenic activity semi-online, automatically and continuously. These are advantages of the EstraMonitor compared to other estrogenic detection systems. It can thus be concluded that, the EstraMonitor is a powerful and feasible semi-online device for monitoring estrogenic activity especially adapted for the use in sewage treatment plants.
Ribozymes for Aminoacylation
(2012)
Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (aaRS) are at the heart of modern translation, catalyzing the accurate biosynthesis of aminoacyl-tRNAs. According to the RNA world hypothesis, the early translation system should have aminoacylation ribozymes for RNA aminoacylation. For this, an aaRS ribozyme system, consisting of the KK13 ribozyme and the C3a ribozyme was successfully designed, which can perform both amino acid activation and aminoacyl transfer reaction. Generation of such aminoacylation ribozyme system would fill up the gap between the RNA world and the modern biological world. In addition, two types of diversified aminoacylation ribozymes, symmetrical ribozymes and self-assembling ribozymes were successfully developed, which may have great meaning in the origin of life.
Indoloquinoline derivatives are very interesting compounds for pharmaceutical applications because of their broad spectrum of biological activity. However, phenyl-substituted indoloquinolines suffer from solubility problems in aqueous solution and require the synthesis of better soluble derivatives for their effective application. Therefore, the indoloquinoline derivatives were covalently attached to two different types of cationic aminoalkyl linkers. After having successfully established the synthesis and subsequent purification of the novel derivatives that could be isolated in excellent yields, these ligands were characterized in this thesis with regard to their spectral properties in different environments and their sequence specific binding to different types of nucleic acids with a variety of spectroscopic methods.
Phosphines are highly versatile ligands for transition metal catalysts because of wide tuning abilites of their stereoelectronic properties. Bulky and basic phosphines, to a smaller extend also π-acidic phosphites were intensively studied whereas dicoordinated trivalent phosphorus compounds were comparatively little investigated in this respect. In part this may go back to the limited stability of many P=C compounds, in the case of the stable benzazaphosphole to low stabilityof complexes with non-zero-valent transition metals. With the availability of suitable chelate complexes this problems may be overcome. Because biaryl phosphines proved particularly useful as chelate ligands this work is focused on the development of convenient syntheses of new biaryl-type N-heterocyclic or functionally aryl substituted 1,3-benzazaphosphole P,N- P,P- and P,O-chelate ligands and the characterization of their structures. The pivotal point was to find an applicable synthetic route to the title ligands. Because currently transition metal catalyzed cross-coupling reactions are a hot field in catalytic research, the initial target of my work was the investigation of the applicability of suitable biaryl coupling reactions on 1,3-benzazaphospholes. There are several types of transition metal catalyzed biaryl couplings. One reaction, which is currently in the main focus by use of non-toxic and air stable coupling partners, often allowing water as environmental friendly solvent, is the Pd-catalyzed Suzuki-Miyaura coupling of an aryl halide with an arylboronic acid. To apply the Suzuki coupling to the synthesis of biaryl-type benzazaphospholes, the synthesis of either benzazaphosphol-2-boronic acids or reactive 2-halogen-benzazaphospholes have to be performed. Because of the successful introduction of functional groups in position 2 of benzazaphospholes via lithiation and reaction with electrophiles, the 2-lithiation of suitably available N-substituted benzazaphospholes and introduction of boryl groups or halogen by reaction with boronic acid esters or with a halogenating reagent like dibromoethane appeared as a realistic route and was chosen for closer study. N-Neopentyl-benzazaphosphole was selected by its relatively easy access and N-mesityl-benzazaphosphole as a N-aryl representative. From the two principal methods developed to synthesize 1,3-benzazaphospholes, only the synthesis and reduction of o-aniline phosphonic acid esters to o-phosphinoanilines and subsequent [4+1] cyclocondensation is promising to access N-substituted 2-CH benzazaphospholes. My first investigations targeted to improve the synthesis of the benzazaphosphole precursors. The invention of a Cu- instead of the earlier used Pd-catalyzed P-C coupling allows a more economical access to anilinophosphonates which were then transformed to 2H-1,3-benzazaphospholes by the established orthoformamide cyclocondensation. Several attempts of the coupling with careful control of dryness of all reagents and solvents were made in order to obtain pure 1,3-benzazaphosphole-2-boronic acid ester and, after mild hydrolysis, to isolate 1,3-benzazaphosphole-2-boronic acid. The coupling worked with N-mesityl-1,3-benzazaphosphole 13e, but the benzazaphosphol-2-boronic acid could not be obtained in pure form because of easy B-C bond cleavage during crystallization, certainly by the two ‘OH groups. For attempts with a reverted methodology, the synthesis of a 2-bromo-substituted benzazaphosphole was studied, which should be coupled with (hetero)arylboronic acids via Suzuki-Mijaura reaction. However, the 2-bromo-benzazaphosphole also could not be obtained in pure form, and a coupling experiment with phenyl boronic acid and catalysis with ligand free Pd/C failed. Therefore, other routes to biaryl-type benzazaphospholes were envisaged. Direct C-H functionalization has emerged over the past few years as an attractive strategy to enhance molecular complexity. This holds also for π-excess-type heterocycles like indoles, benzoxazoles or purines which allow direct CH-arylation in 2-position. These reactions generally involve palladium based catalysts and in some cases rhodium catalysts. In a series of experiments the catalytic arylation, heteroarylation and later also alkylation were studied with 1,3-benzazaphospholes 13a-e as precursors. The initial studies were carried out with iodobenzene, keeping similar reaction conditions as for 2-CH arylation of indoles. Then transition metal catalysts, bases and conditions were varied. The necessity and influence of a catalyst was established by blind experiments without transition metal catalyst which led to strong decrease of the reactivity. However, the transitional metal catalyzed reactions of N-substituted-1,3-benzazaphosphole with aryl- and heteroaryl halides did not give the desired 2-aryl-substituted 1,3-benzazaphosphole biaryl ligands but revealed a novel oxidative addition at the P=C double bond. In the presence of moisture benzazaphospholine-P-oxides are formed. Further exploration of the scope of this reaction showed that it is applicable to several functionally substituted aryl halides and heteroaryl halides. As besides PdX2 (X = Cl, OAc) also Pd(0)(PPh3)4 was found active as catalyst, it can be assumed, that the reaction occurs via a Pd(0) species and oxidative addition of the aryl halide at Pd(0). Because Pd(0) will coordinate stronger to the π-acidic benzazaphosphole than Pd(II) it is assumed that in the first step small equilibrium amounts of a Pd(0)benzazaphosphole complex will be formed which undergo the oxidative addition and then react to benzazaphospholium salt and furnish back a Pd(0) complex with 1,3-benzazaphosphole ligand. The benzazaphospholium salts are highly sensitive to moisture and react with traces of water to form benzazaphospholine-P-oxides 20 and acid, neutralized by the base. A cyclic species RR’P(OH)=CHR”, where the halogen is replaced by OH, may be assumed as intermediate which undergoes a rearrangement to the more stable RR’P(=O)-CH2R” tautomer, driven by the high P=O bond energy. After various investigations of the optimum conditions for the reaction, a number of new functionally substituted P-aryl or P-heteroaryl benzazaphospholine P-oxides and 1,3-dineopentyl-benzazaphospholine-3-oxide were isolated and characterized by 1H, 31P, 13C and HRMS data and two by crystallography. The biaryl-type 2-phenyl-1,3-benzazaphosphole is known since the earliest reports of these heterocycles, synthesized by cyclocondensation of 2-phosphinoaniline with benziminoester hydrochloride or in low yield with benzaldehyde. The latter method was further developed because of the compatibility of the aldehyde group with various donor functions. 2-Phosphinoaniline (12a) and 2-phosphino-4-methylaniline (12b) were heated with pyridine-2-carboxaldehyde under varied conditions, and a crucial role of acid catalyst was observed in the investigation. The results showed that the dehydrogenating cyclocondensation, if catalyzed by a suitable type and amount of acid catalyst, works well for primary phosphinoanilines 12a,b and a variety of reactive aldehydes, including N-heterocyclic and o- or m-functionally substituted arylaldehydes. In an equimolar ratio, on heating usually hydrogen is eliminated, at least formally, to furnish the aromatically stabilized 1H-1,3-benzazaphosphole ring systems of 35 whereas in other cases reductive side reactions occur, e.g. the N-CH2R substitution to 36 in reactions with two equivalents of aldehyde. Thus the synthesis of 1,5-dimethyl-1,3-benzazaphosphole (36a) was achieved by double cyclocondensation of 12b and formaldehyde in a 1:2 molar ratio. This provides the so far shortest way to synthesize N-substituted 1,3-benzazaphospholes and suggests, that the reaction is generally applicable in reactions with two equivalents of monoaldehyde. This puts the question if N-secondary o-phosphinoanilines such as N-neopentyl-2-phosphinoaniline (12d) can be cyclocondensed with aldehydes to benzazaphospholes or if a primary amino group is required. The successful experiment shows that cyclocondensation of N-secondary o-phosphinoanilines with suitable aldehydes is possible. N-Neopentyl-2-pyrido-1,3-benzazaphosphole was obtained in high yield. An interesting extension of the above reaction are cyclocondensations with compounds bearing two aldehyde groups. Double condensation of 12b with o-phthaldialdehyde was performed. It proceeded fast and gave tetracyclic-1,3-benzazaphosphole in high yield. Based on the NMR monitored primary formation of organoammonium phosphino glycolates from amines, phosphines and glyoxylic acid, followed by conversion to phosphinoglycines, it is assumed that the reaction proceeds by initial attack of the primary phosphino group of 12b at the carbonyl carbon atom of R-CHO, polarized with the help of the acid catalyst. The resulting P-C bonded secondary phosphine, containing an α-hydroxy group, may release water after transfer of a proton to oxygen in equilibrium, followed by attack of amine. This leads to formation of the dihydro-intermediate 34, observed by NMR reaction monitoring in several cases. Possible ways are releasing of H2 during reflux, directly giving 2-substituted NH-1,3-benzazaphospholes 35, or hydrogen transfer, connected e.g. with N-substitution leading to 1,2-disubstituted 1,3-benzazaphospholes 36. The second path is observed mainly when excess or double molar quantities of aldehydes are used at the start of the reaction. The two hydrogen atoms at P and C2 are consumed during the second condensation and formation of the NCH2R group and generate the P=C double bond. Finally, cyclocondensation of o-phosphinoanilines with aldehydes has proven as a useful method for the synthesis of biaryl type benzazaphosphole ligands. After thorough investigations, N-primary and secondary phosphino anilines were found cyclisable with various heteroaryl aldehydes upon refluxing in toluene in the presence of a suitable acid catalyst, and 11 new compounds were synthesized following this procedure and characterized by 1H, 31P, 13C NMR and HRMS data. For two compounds crystal structures were also obtained. First attempts to synthesize chelate complexes with the 2-(hetero)aryl-1,3-benzazaphospholes were started. A soluble 2-(o-diphenylphosphinophenyl)-1,3-benzazaphoasphole-Cr(CO)4 chelate complex was detected by NMR spectroscopy, whereas most products of the new ligands with Rh(COD) or NiCp complexes were insoluble in usual NMR solvents and require further efforts for synthesis and full analytical and structural characterization.
Novel heterocyclic alpha-phosphinoamino acids, by structural relationship named 3-phosphaprolines, were obtained by cyclocondensation of 2-phenylphosphinoethylamines with glyoxylic, pyruvic or phenylglyoxylic acid at room temperature in diethylether. The reactions proceed via primary attack of the P-lone electron pair, as shown by the synthesis of phosphonium glycolates from tertiary phosphines and glyoxylic acid, and addition of PH at the carbonyl group. The ring closure proceeds by replacement of the hydroxy by the amino group and is kinetically controlled. NMR monitoring of the phosphaprolines in CD3OD over several days indicates changes of the diastereoisomer ratios leading to higher contents of the more stable trans-diastereoisomers. The zwitterionic compounds are soluble in part in CD3OD, DMF or DMSO, are somewhat sensitive to air in solution and may undergo hydrolysis with larger amounts of water. The structures are proved by multinuclear NMR spectra and two crystal structure analyses. Suitable phosphaprolines as well phosphonium glycolates and Ni(COD)2 allow to generate precatalysts, activated by NaH for the oligomerisation of ethylene to mainly linear products with methyl and vinyl end groups. Some additional investigations with phosphinophenolates, another type of P-C-C-O- ligands, were performed for comparison. Precatalysts prepared from 2-phosphinophenolesters and Ni(COD)2 at room temperature were characterized by multinuclear NMR but decomposed on heating to stable nickel cis-bis(P,O-chelate) complexes. Heating precatalysts generated from a phosphinophenolester or phosphinophenols and Ni(COD)2 in the presence of ethylene under pressure led to linear ethylene oligomers. These reactions are much faster than the above mentioned conversions with NaH activated P,O-Ni-catalysts. In the presence of 9-decenol with unprotected remote hydroxyl group incorporation of a small amount of isolated hydroxyoctyl side groups takes place, detected by 13C NMR spectroscopy. Finally it is stated that the development of a facile synthesis and the characterization of the properties of the phosphaprolines pave the way for derivatisation and further studies with these novel types of amino acids.
In this thesis, two novel assay systems had been developed, which allow a fast and easy screening for amine transaminase activity as well as the characterization of the amino donor and acceptor specificity of a given amine transaminase. The assays overcome some limitations of previously described assays but of course have some limitations themselves. The relatively low wavelength of 245 nm, at which the production of acetophenone is detected with the spectrophotometric assay, limits the amount of protein/crude extract that can be applied, which eventually results in a decreased sensitivity at higher enzyme loads due to an increased initial absorbance. Otherwise, this assay can be used very easily for the investigation of the amino acceptor specificity and both pH and temperature dependencies of amine transaminases. The conductometric assay is – by its very nature – limited to low-conducting buffers, a neutral pH and constant temperatures. In summary, the assays complement one another very well and the complete characterization of the most important enzyme properties can be accomplished quickly. Furthermore, we developed and applied a novel in silico search strategy for the identification of (R)-selective amine transaminases in sequence databases. Structural information of probably related proteins was used for rational protein design to predict key amino acid substitutions that indicate the desired activity. We subsequently searched protein databases for proteins already carrying these mutations instead of constructing the corresponding mutants in the laboratory. This methodology exploits the fact that naturally evolved proteins have undergone selection over millions of years, which has resulted in highly optimized catalysts. Using this in silico approach, we have discovered 17 (R)-selective amine transaminases. In theory, this strategy can be applied to other enzyme classes and fold types as well and for this reason constitutes a new concept for the identification of desired enzymes. Finally, we applied the seven most promising candidates of the identified proteins to asymmetric synthesis of various optical pure amines with (R)-configuration starting from the corresponding ketones. We used a lactate dehydrogenase/glucose dehydrogenase system for the necessary shift of the thermodynamic equilibrium. For all ketones at least one enzyme was found that allowed complete conversion to the corresponding chiral amine with excellent optical purities >99% ee. Bearing in mind that until last year there was only one (R)-selective amine transaminase commercially available and two microorganisms with the corresponding activity described, the identification of numerous enzymes is a breakthrough in asymmetric synthesis of chiral amines.
Triple helix-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) are one of the most specific DNA duplex binding agents and offer new perspectives towards oligonucleotide-mediated gene regulation and manipulation. However, the poor thermodynamic stability of DNA triplexes under physiological conditions limits a successful application in the antigene strategy. Thus, the conjugation of TFOs with small triplex-specific binding ligands is a promising approach to stabilize the formed complexes and to enhance their overall binding affinity. The present study focused on the synthesis of novel TFO conjugates with triplex-binding indolo[3,2-b]quinoline derivatives (PIQ) and on their ability to form and stabilize intermolecular triplexes through their recognition of a duplex target. During the course of the work the thermodynamics of conjugate binding and structural aspects of drug-DNA interactions have been characterized by a variety of spectroscopic and calorimetric techniques.
The present work provides new insight concerning histidine phosphorylation in proteins, which is an essential regulatory posttranslational modification. To study histidine phosphorylation, a newly developed NMR approach, the HNP experiment, is presented in this thesis. The HNP experiment provides specific experimental evidence of phosphorylated histidines in proteins. It allows for the determination of the regiochemistry of phosphohistidines on the basis of three individual peak patterns for distinguishing all three phosphohistidines i.e. 1- and 3-phosphohistidine and 1,3-diphosphohistidine. This novel NMR approach allows the investigation of histidine phosphorylation in proteins under physiological conditions without resorting to chemical shift comparisons, reference compounds, or radioactively labelled phosphate. In this thesis, histidine phosphorylation in the regulatory domains PRDI and PRDII of the Bacillus subtilis antiterminator protein GlcT was intensely studied. GlcT is a transcription factor, which regulates the phosphotransferase system (PTS) by modulating the expression level of PTS-enzymes (Enzyme I, HPr, Enzyme II) on a transcriptional level. Upon the phosphorylation of conserved histidines in PRDI and PRDII, the function of GlcT is regulated through its aggregation state. In this thesis, it is shown that histidines in both PRDs are primarily phosphorylated at their N(Epsilon-2), forming 3-phosphohistidine. In addition, we found, by newly optimized mass spectrometry conditions, that both PRDs are dominantly onefold phosphorylated. By using tandem mass spectrometry to study PRDI, we identified histidine 170, which is the second of two conserved histidines (His 111 and His 170), as the phosphorylation site. In this thesis, it is also shown through comprehensive mutational studies that both conserved histidines (His 218 and His 279) in PRDII can be individually phosphorylated. This is in good agreement with mass spectrometry results that indicated an additional twofold phosphorylation in PRDII. This can be explained as follows: an intra-domain phosphate transfer between both conserved histidines in PRDII might be involved in the phosphorylation reaction, finally leading to a mainly onefold phosphorylated PRDII at one of the two conserved histidines. This minor twofold phosphorylation has also been found in PRDI. However, the specific peak pattern in the HNP-spectra of PRDI strongly suggest that this additional phosphorylation originates from a 1,3-diphosphohistidine, most likely at histidine 170. Furthermore, for the first time the existence of 1,3-diphosphohistidine in a protein was found. We also show that the phosphorylation of PRDI can be achieved in the absence of Enzyme II which is in contrast to the literature. Shown by analytical gel filtration, the monomeric aggregation state of PRDI obtained upon Enzyme II-free phosphorylation is identical to the monomeric aggregation state which was proposed for the Enzyme II-dependent phosphorylation of GlcT. As shown in this thesis, the combined results of HNP-NMR, mass spectrometry and analytical gel filtration deepen our understanding of regulatory histidine phosphorylation in the individual PRDI and PRDII domains of the Bacillus sub- tilis GlcT. I anticipate that this approach will be applicable to study histidine phosphorylations in other phosphoproteins.
Transition metal complexes play a crucial role in antitumor therapy. Complexes of platinum, ruthenium as well as lanthanum and gallium have been investigated in preclinical as well as in clinical studies. The best known platinum(II) agents approved worldwide, cisplatin or carboplatin, are used in nearly 50% of all cancer therapies. This work focused on the development of new metal-based drugs that could act against human cancer cells. It was motivated in part by previous work with Cu(II) complexes, reporting new coordination compounds of SOD mimicking and cytotoxic activities. On the basis of this work we chose several commercially available heterocyclic ligands to synthesize new metal ion complexes in search of their interesting biological activity. New as well as previously reported Cu(II), Co(II), Pt(II) and Zn(II) complexes were synthesized using various ligands (1-6). Almost all chelating 2:1 ligand-metal complexes were obtained generally in water at room temperature in the reaction of metal(II) chloride with corresponding aromatic nitrogen ligands bearing an O-carboxylate group ligand. The synthesized chelating complexes were characterized by the use of spectroscopic methods, elemental analyses and HPLC chromatography and some by X-ray crystallography. Such coordination compounds are easily formed by transition metals with free orbitals d that can accept the donor electron pairs. The coordination is through the heterocyclic nitrogen and carboxylate oxygen donor atoms, which was shown by analysis of the characteristic functional groups in the IR spectra. The d-d transitions and absorption of visible light in Cu(II) and Co(II) complexes make them highly colored, blue, green or green-blue, respectively. The configuration of the coordination center was established in some cases by X-ray crystallography. Most of the already published structures possess the trans configuration. This led to the assumption that other uncrystallized complexes were also trans configured. However, X-ray data of the Cu(II) complex of 5 showed quite unexpectedly the cis configuration. On the other hand, the LC/MS experiments with the Pt(II) complex of 5 indicated that this complex exists in two isomeric forms, i.e., cis and trans at the Pt(II) center. Through the use of density functional calculations we optimized the structures and calculated the energies and dipole moments. The differences in energy for all complexes were about 6 to 15-fold lower when compared to cis and transplatin. The DFT calculations confirmed that the trans-isomers are more stable than their cis-isomers. UV-Vis stability studies with most of the synthesized complexes as well as some other Cu(II) complexes were performed to study the spectral changes over 24 h in addition of glutathione, a tripeptide present in the cancer cells and ascorbate that were added to the incubations. The results indicated time-dependent changes and instability of the complexes in the cells and their possible decomposition to lose the ligand and release the metal ion. In the case of Cu(II) complexes, reduction of Cu(II) to Cu(I) may take place. New species such as GSSG could arise and the complexes may decarboxylate, but these structures were not elucidated. The synthesized coordination metal(II) complexes were tested for their potential antiproliferative activities by using the crystal violet staining method in a panel of human cancer cell lines. Out of all complexes, three Pt(II) complexes of 2, 5 and 6 showed satisfactory activity and for these complexes the IC50 values were additionally determined in new RT-4, DAN-G and MCF-7 cancer cell lines. Interestingly, the active complexes were the chelating trans complexes which is quite unexpected, based on the difference in activities between cis and transplatin. All of the complexes were tested for their potential antimicrobial activities in comparison to the standard antibiotics on such bacterial strains as Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus subtilis, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and yeast Candida maltosa. Co(II) complexes have been especially known to act against bacterial strains. The activity of the Co(II) complexes was indeed the highest of all metal(II) complexes. The ligand 2 (a nicotinic acid isomer) was also found active. This fact could explain why some antibacterial activity was found in the MIC assay. In addition to the complexes synthesized in this work, several novel heterocyclic metal(II) complexes of copper, ruthenium, platinum, gallium, osmium and lanthanum from other research groups were screened for their antiproliferative activity, some of which exhibited very potent activity in the cancer cell lines. In conclusion, Pt(II) complexes with bis-chelating heterocyclic carboxylate ligands represent a particularly interesting new class of compounds from the view point of their structural and biological properties.
In the search for bioactive compounds, 32 fungal strains were isolated from Indonesian marine habitats. Ethyl acetate extracts of their culture broth were tested for cytotoxic activity against a urinary bladder carcinoma cell line and for antifungal and antibacterial activities against fish and human pathogenic bacteria as well as against plant and human pathogenic fungi. Bioassay-guided fractionation led to the isolation of bioactive compounds. Altogether 14 compounds were isolated and further elucidated. The compounds were obtained from the ethyl acetate and dichloromethane extracts of six fungal strains. They included 9 polyketides, 2 terpenes, 1 alkaloid and 2 till now undefined structures.
With the development of new functional genomics methods that can access the whole genome, transcriptome, proteome and metabolome more comprehensive insights in cellular processes are possible. Largely based on these advances, our knowledge about molecular constituents for many organisms is increasing at a tremendous rate. Until today, the genomes of several organisms including pathogenic bacteria are already sequenced and pave the way for metabolic network constructions. Interest in metabolomics, the global profiling of metabolites in a cell, tissue or organism, has been rapidly increased. A range of analytical techniques, including nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS), liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC–MS), Fourier Transform mass spectrometry (FT–MS), high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) are required in order to maximize the number of metabolites that can be identified in a matrix. With the help of microbial metabolomics (qualification and quantification of a huge variety of metabolites from a bacterium) deciphering of the bacterial metabolism is feasible. The metabolome pipeline or workflow encompasses the processes of (i) sample generation and preparation, (ii) establishment of analytical techniques (iii) collection of analytical data, raw data pre-processing, (iv) data analysis and (v) data integration into biological questions. The present work contributes to the above mentioned steps in a metabolomics workflow. A specific focus was set to the exo- and endometabolome analysis of Gram-positive bacteria
Tertiary alcohols have become interesting targets for organic synthesis themselves or as building blocks for valuable pharmaceutical compounds. However, the synthesis of optically pure tertiary alcohols is still a challenge both chemical and enzymatic means. Enzymes containing the GGG(A)X motif in the active site region have been known to show activity towards these sterically demanding substrates. Several tertiary alcohols have been resolved with high enantioselectivity by using this biocatalytic synthetic route. This thesis aims at providing a better understanding of enantiorecognition of GGG(A)X motif hydrolases in the enzymatic synthesis of enantiomerically enriched tertiary alcohols. Kinetic resolution of a wide range of tertiary alcohols using hydrolases provided insights on factors that can influence enantioselectivity of GGG(A)X motif enzymes. Additionally, a newly proposed chemoenzymatic method to synthesize protected alpha,alpha-dialkyl-alpha-hydroxycarboxylic acids has broadened the application of these enzymes to synthesize optically pure tertiary alcohols. Newly found biocatalysts through functional screening, database mining and rational protein design approaches provided a better enzyme platform for optically pure tertiary alcohol resolution.
Bacillus licheniformis is one of the most important hosts used in the biotechnological industry for the production of technical enzymes, antibiotics and a number of biochemicals. Although this bacterium has been used for a long time as an expression host, only little information on expression systems of this host is available. An expression system could be controlled by a cell density signal, a specific chemical inducer or a thermal shift. A limiting substrate such as glucose or phosphate limitation is suggested to use as the signal for the induction of an expression system. When B. licheniformis cells are subjected to nutrient limitation conditions, numerous genes involved in the metabolism of alternative nutrient sources are induced in order to keep cell survival. Therefore, the main topic of this study was to identify and investigate the regulation of genes or operons which are strongly induced in B. licheniformis cells grown under nutrient limitation conditions in order to apply for the construction of potential new expression systems. The research includes studies on the regulation of genes which are responsible for the acetoin and 2,3-butanediol utilization in B. licheniformis cells grown under glucose limitation conditions. Furthermore, we also analyzed the regulation of phytase gene expression as well as investigated the function of a putative ribonuclease expressed in B. licheniformis under phosphate limitation conditions. From this study, it was shown that in B. licheniformis, the utilization of acetoin and 2,3-butanediol was mainly mediated by enzymes encoded by the acoABCL operon. The transcription of this operon was regulated by sigma L transcription factor and was induced by acetoin. The acuABC operon was suggested to play as an indirect regulatory role for the acetoin utilization in B. licheniformis. This operon was controlled by a typical sigma A dependent promoter, however, acetoin was not an inducer for its expression. Furthermore, the regulation of phytase gene expression was suggested to be controlled by PhoPR-two component systems. The results showed that phytate, which is the substrate of phytase enzyme, was not an inducer for the expression of phy gene. However, growth experiments revealed that phytate served as a good alternative phosphate source for the growth of B. licheniformis cells under these conditions. Finally, the inactivation of BLi03719 gene, coding for a putative ribonuclease, resulted in an increase of the total RNA concentration of B. licheniformis cells grown in phosphate limited medium. However, the mutation did not affect the expression of the heterologous reporter gene. Therefore, it could be speculated that the putative ribonuclease BLi03719 plays a role in ribosomal RNA degradation under these conditions.
Summary Cyanobacteria are a diverse and ancient group of photosynthetic prokaryotic organisms that can inhabit a wide range of environments including extreme conditions such as hot springs, desert soils and the Antarctic. They are abundant producers of natural products well recognized for their bioactivity and utility in drug discovery and biotechnology applications. Novel intracellular and extracellular compounds from various cultured and field cyanobacteria with diverse biological activities and a wide range of chemical classes have considerable potential for development of pharmaceuticals and other biomedical applications. However, cyanobacteria are still viewed as unexplored source of potential drugs. Especially the collections of cyanobacterial strains from South East Asia where biodiversity is high are still largely unexplored. Thus, we investigated twelve soil cyanobacterial strains isolated from soil samples collected from rice, cotton, and coffee fields in Dak Lak province of Vietnam and one marine strain, Lyngbya majuscula collected from Khanh Hoa province of Vietnam for the search for new compounds with antimicrobial and cytotoxic activities. From the 12 soil cyanobacterial strains, 48 extracts prepared with n-hexane, methanol, and water for biomasses and ethyl acetate for growth media were screened for antibacterial activity against Gram-positive bacteria (Bacillus subtilis ATCC 6051 and Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 6538) and Gram-negative bacteria (Escherichia coli ATCC 11229, Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC 27853). Of 48 extracts, 47.92% and 45.83% showed activity against Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus, respectively, while 22.92% and 6.25% exhibited activity against Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, respectively. All investigated cyanobacteria (12/12) showed antibacterial activity to at least one of the test organisms applied. Among the active extracts, extracts obtained from 5 cyanobacterial strains, Westiellopsis sp. VN, Calothrix javanica, Scytonema ocellatum, Anabaena sp. and Nostoc sp. showed the highest strength and range of antibacterial activity and therefore were selected for chemical investigation with an emphasis on the isolation and structure elucidation of antimicrobial compounds. Bioassay-guided fractionation of the methanol extract prepared from biomass of Westiellopsis sp. VN by silica gel chromatography, followed by sephadex LH-20 chromatography and reversed-phase HPLC led to isolation and identification of 6 compounds as ambiguine D isonitrile, ambiguine B isonitrile, dechloro-ambiguine B isonitrile, fischerellin A, hydroxy-eicosatetraenoic acid and methoxy-nonadecadienoic acid. Identification of these active compounds was established by direct comparison of our spectroscopic data, including 1H NMR and HR-ESI-MS with those reported in the literature. All these compounds showed biological activity. The identification of fatty acids and other volatile components by GS-MS in the active MeOH fraction obtained from EtOAc extract of growth medium was done before commencing further fractionation processes. Culture optimization of Westiellopsis sp.VN showed that NaNO3 deficiency increased accumulation of antimicrobial compounds. Biosynthesis of antimicrobial compounds increased over cultivation time resulting in increased diameter of inhibition zone of the methanol extract towards the end of the 7-to 8- week growth period, but the most clear inhibition zone of this extract was detected after cultivation time of 8 weeks. Bioassay-guided fractionation of the methanol extract prepared from biomass of either Calothrix javanica by C18 chromatography followed by reversed-phase HPLC or Scytonema ocellatum by C18 chromatography followed by silica gel chromatography and reversed-phase HPLC led to isolation and structure elucidation of new cyclic peptide named daklakapeptin. Structure of daklakapeptin was elucidated by exhaustive 1D (1H) and 2D (COSY, TOCSY, NOESY, HMQC, HMBC) NMR spectroscopy in combination with HR-ESI-MS. Daklakapeptin was found to have totally 12 residues including 6 proteinogenic amino acids (Pro, Tyr, Ile, Leu, Gln, Thr), 4 complexes (X,Y,T,Z) and the methyl derivative of Ile. The exact sequence of daklakapeptin is shown in following figure with X: (CH3)2CHCH2CH2CH(NH-)CH2CO-, Y:(CH3)2CHCH(OH)CH(NH-)CO-, T: HOCH2CH2CH(NH-)CO-, Z: HOCH2CHOHCH(NH-)CO- This new cyclic peptide exhibited antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus with diameter of inhibition zone of 12.5 mm in concentration of 200 mg/disc. Further test for activity to other bacteria and for cytotoxic activity are in progress. Using reversed-phase HPLC to separate compounds in the crude ethyl acetate extract obtained from culture medium of Anabaena sp. led to isolation and structure elucidation of flourensadiol. The structure of flourensadiol was established using an extensive array of 1D (1H, 13C, DEPT-135) and 2D (HMQC, COSY, HMBC) NMR and HR-ESI-MS experiments. Flourensadiol was isolated previously from the common western shrub Flourensia cernua. However, only MS, IR, and proton NMR data but no reports on biological activity were available. In this study, we report the complete NMR data of flourensadiol for the first time. Flourensadiol was found to be very strong antibacterial active against Escherichia coli with diameter of inhibition zone of 20.0 mm in concentration of 200 mg/disc. Further test for activity to other bacteria and cytotoxic activity are in progress. Bioassay-guided fractionation of the methanol extract from biomass of Nostoc sp. by silica gel chromatography followed by C18 chromatography and reversed phase HPLC led to isolation of the active fraction NsF2 which exhibited antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus with diameter of inhibition zone of 10.0 mm in concentration of 500 mg/disc. The low resolution ESI-MS of fraction NsF2 showed signal at m/z 426 [M+H]+. The NMR and MS characterization of compounds in fraction NsF2 is in progress. Bioassay-guided fractionation of the methanol extract prepared from biomass of marine cyanobacterium Lyngbya majuscula collected from Khanh Hoa province of Vietnam by various chromatographic methods (CC, PTLC, HPLC) afforded 3 cytotoxic compounds anhydrodebromoaplysiatoxin, debromoaplysiatoxin, and anhydroaplysiatoxin. Identification of these cytotoxic compounds was established by direct comparison of our spectroscopic data, including (1H, 13C) NMR and HR-ESI-MS with those reported in the literature. In our study, debromoaplysiatoxin and anhydroaplysiatoxin exhibited cytotoxic activity against bladder cancer cell line 5637 with IC50 of 86 ng/ml and 40 ng/ml, respectively but anhydrodebromoaplysiatoxin was not yet tested for cytotoxic activity. The identification of fatty acids by GS-MS technique in the n-hexane extract obtained from biomass of this marine cyanobacterium was undertaken before commencing further fractionation processes. The presented results prove that soil cyanobacteria are a promising source to yield chemical and pharmaceutical interesting compounds.
The aim of this thesis was to validate a method called OSCARR for One-pot, Simple Cassette Randomization and Recombination for focused directed evolution, which had been developed by Dr. Hidalgo. It is based upon the megaprimer PCR method using outer primers differing in TM and including asymmetric cycles before the addition of the forward primer to generate more mutated megaprimer. As mutation-carrying primers, spiked oligonucleotides are employed. These spiked oligonucleotides are designed using an algorithm and have strictly defined composition of nucleotides at each position. An OSCARR library of the Pseudomonas fluorescens esterase I (PFE I) of approximately 8000 clones was generated and screened for altered chain-length selectivity. Two mutants with higher activity towards medium chain length p-nitrophenyl esters were identified, both carried the mutation F126I, which causes the substrate entrance tunnel to be widened, thus facilitating access of bulkier substrates to the active site. One mutant carried the additional mutation G120S which completes a catalytic tetrad which is observed mainly in proteases. F126I had a stronger influence on chain-length specificity, so the further amino acids which form the “bottleneck” to the active site were mutated to further widen the entrance, and mutants with improved activity were found. The bottleneck mutants which consist of single, double, triple and quadruple mutants which are mostly combinations of F126L, F144L, F159L and I225L were then assayed for altered enantioselectivity against chiral acids and secondary alcohols. For substrates 1-phenyl-1-propyl acetate (2), 1-phenyl-2-propyl acetate (3) and 1-phenyl ethyl acetate (4), mutants with increased enantioselectivity were found. I225L plays a crucial role, as it is vital for enantioselectivity against 3, but destroys selectivity against 2, both facts obvious from the comparison of the triple mutant without I225L (mutant T3) and the corresponding quadruple mutant including I225L (mutant Q). However, the single mutant I225L alone does not possess high selectivity against 3, so synergistic effects play an important role. The PFE I wild type already possesses a good enantioselectivity in the hydrolysis of 4, but all mutants which were analyzed in detail surpass the wild type. The program YASARA was then used to calculate docking solutions for both enantiomers of 2 and 3 into the wild type and the best mutant. The results revealed that the mutants’ widened bottleneck allows the phenyl moiety of the substrates to point towards the access tunnel, while only (R)-2 does so in the wild type. Residues 126 and 144 do not come very close to the substrate and are more likely to influence substrate diffusion. Another goal was to find a way to confer promiscuous amidase activity upon the PFE I. In the search for structural homologues, a close structural neighbour with amidase activity was found. The --lactamase from Aureobacterium sp. was named after its activity toward the Vince lactam 2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-en-3-one. Biocatalysis experiments with the PFE I and its mutants revealed an excellent enantioselectivity against the ( )-lactam. Specific activities were determined for purified proteins, and the activity of some mutants was within the same order of magnitude as lactamase’s activity.
Pyrrolobenzodiazepines (PBDs) are a group of antitumor antibiotics that exert their biological activity by alkylation of guanine bases within the minor groove of double-stranded DNA through nucleophilic attack of the guanine amino group on the PBD imine functionality. In trying to increase both the binding strength and sequence selectivity for further enhancing their biological activity, PBDs were linked to additional DNA binding moieties. Preliminary DNA melting experiments partly also performed in our lab with a series of closely related PBD-naphthalimide and benzimidazole conjugates revealed extraordinary DNA-binding capability of hybrids PBD-NIM and PBD-BIMZ. These studies also indicated the favorable contribution of the piperazine structure on drug binding to the DNA duplex. Previously, in vitro cytotoxicity studies also showed promising antitumor activity of both compounds with PBD-BIMZ having the largest cytotoxic potential among various examined conjugates. In the present work, the kinetics, thermodynamics and structural details of the drug-DNA interactions have been determined employing a variety of spectroscopic, calorimetric and computational methods. Thus, a high thermal duplex stabilization upon DNA binding could be ascertained for both drugs and attributed to their covalent attachment to the DNA guanine bases. The 1:1 binding stoichiometry as well as the exclusive minor groove binding for the benzimidazole and the mixed minor grove - intercalative type of binding for the naphthalimide hybrid could be verified by several spectroscopic methods including NMR spectroscopy. Furthermore, by using a combination of solution NMR and some of the most recent molecular modeling techniques, the first high-resolution structures of DNA-drug complexes with PBD hybrid drugs could be obtained giving detailed insight into the specific drug-DNA interactions. Thus, details on van der Waals and hydrogen bond contacts within the complex and the tight fit of the benzimidazole hybrid into the DNA minor groove could be revealed. By using recent data analysis techniques like clustering algorithms, the high flexibility of the piperazine moiety within the PBD-BIMZ-DNA complex could be nicely captured and visualized. Additionally, a thermodynamic analysis for the non-covalent drug binding by UV and fluorescence spectroscopy as well as by direct calorimetric methods revealed a 1:1 binding mode driven by enthalpy changes and counteracted by unfavorable entropic contributions to result in moderately strong association constants. Analysis of the solvent-accessible surface area confirmed the importance of hydrophobic effects on drug binding and the combination of these data with ITC measurements allowed for an extensive thermodynamic characterization of the drug binding process. With respect to the influence of the individual drug moieties on DNA binding, the importance of the piperazine ring for drug-DNA interactions and the basis for its capability to enhance drug binding were addressed. Furthermore, it could be shown that the naphthalimide and benzimidazole moieties also impart additional sequence selectivity to the alkylating PBD structural unit and these distinct differences in the sequence selectivity could be linked to the three-dimensional structures of the DNA-drug complexes. Clearly, the combination of detailed structural and thermodynamic data of complex formation allows for a better understanding of the binding mechanism and structure-activity relationship when it comes to drug-DNA interactions. Therefore, the information gathered can assist in the design of more efficient derivatives of this type of alkylating DNA binding drugs in particular and of DNA recognition by ligands composed of several motifs in general.
Discovery of novel Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenases and their application in organic synthesis.
(2009)
The application of BVMOs in kinetic resolution is a versatile alternative for the synthesis of optically pure esters. Within this thesis BVMOs proved to be highly active against a broad range of linear and aryl aliphatic ketones yielding a variety of enantiopure products. Among the beta-hydroxy ketones several CHMOs and BVMOPsfl showed the best results (E > 100), whereas the application of the latter enzyme also allowed access to the abnormal esters (regioisomeric excess > 40%). Interestingly, some enzymes showed a reduced activity and selectivity with a growing chain length of the ketone, suggesting that middle-chain ketones (C8-C10) might be preferred. Moreover, the production of optically pure 1,2-diols was observed (yields 8-50%), resulting from an in vivo hydrolysis of the 2-hydroxy alkyl acetates. Regarding the N-protected beta-amino ketones, results were different. While the majority of CHMOs catalyzed linear substrates showing high enantioselectivities (for CHMOBrevi1 and CHMOBrachy E > 100, c = 40-50%), BVMOPsfl did not convert nitrogen bearing linear ketones, although this might also be justified with the methylcarbamate protecting group. Interestingly, the number of BVMOs catalyzing oxidation of spatially more demanding linear branched beta-amino ketones was greatly reduced, indicating steric hindrance that was also combined with a decrease in selectivity. Similar to the observation for beta-hydroxy ketones, also the 2 amino alkyl acetates hydrolyzed furnishing 2-amino alcohols (yields 9-52%). Moreover, hydrolysis of the “abnormal“ esters allowed an alternative access to valuable native and non-native β-amino acids. In a two step process, using CDMO from R. ruber and CAL-B, it was possible to generate N-protected (+)-beta-leucine. During kinetic resolutions of aryl aliphatic ketones it was observed that the highest enantio¬selectivities could be achieved utilizing HAPMOJD1, HAPMOACB and PAMO, enzymes typically preferring aromatic substrates. Biotransformation with 3-phenyl-2-butanone revealed an E-value > 100 for HAPMOJD1 (S-selective). Nevertheless, also BVMOPsfl converted this sub¬strate (E = 43), and also CHMOAcineto and CPMO oxidized it, although selectivity was rather low (E < 5). Interestingly, BVMOKT2440 was the only examined enzyme showing R selectivity (E = 13). Additionally, increasing the scale and performing biotransformation in a baffled flask could increase enantioselectivity of BVMOPsfl from E = 43 to 82. The discovery of novel enzymes with diverse properties is still a main goal of the biotechnological industry. Within these studies, two BVMOs (BVMOKT2440 and HAPMOJD1) could be successfully amplified from genomic DNA using different PCR-methods. Then, expression in E. coli was optimized, revealing that the reduction of expression temperature, implementation of E. coli JM109 or RosettaTM (DE3), possessing the pRARE plasmid to facilitate translation of rare codons in the latter case, and/or co-expression of chaperones (pGro7: GroEL/ES-familiy) could increase the amount of soluble and active protein. Both enzymes were subjected to biocatalysis and it was found that BVMOKT2440 preferentially oxidized linear ketones, while HAPMOJD1 dominantly converted aryl aliphatic ketones. The latter enzyme could be purified by anion exchange and affinity chromatography allowing examination of kinetic parameters. Thereby, HAPMOJD1 displayed lowest KM-values for acetophenone derivatives bearing their substituent in para-position (KM < 320 µM). Moreover, also aldehydes and heteroaromatic compounds were oxidized and also sulfoxidation was observed. Interestingly it was found, that both BVMO genes are located in the direct neighborhood of a dehydrogenase and a hydrolase. This led to the suggestion that these enzymes may be metabolically connected in the degradation of their natural substrate.
1,1-Bis(trimethylsilyloxy)ketene acetals represent useful synthetic building blocks which can be regarded as masked carboxylic acid dianions. In recent years, a number of cyclization reactions of 1,1-bis(trimethylsilyloxy)ketene acetals have been reported. Functionalized maleic anhydrides represent important synthetic building blocks, which have been employed, for example, in the synthesis of γ-alkylidenebutenolides, maleimides, 5-alkylidene-5H-pyrrol-2-ones. Substituted maleic anhydrides are available by Michael reaction of nucleophiles with parent maleic anhydride and subsequent halogenation and elimination. Oxalyl chloride is an important synthetic tool for the synthesis of O-heterocycles. 3-hydroxymaleic (1-3) anhydrides were synthesised by one-pot cyclization of 1,1-bis(trimethylsilyloxy)ketene acetals with oxalyl chloride using TMSOTf as a catalyst. The Me3SiOTf mediated reaction of 1,1-bis(trimethylsilyloxy)ketene acetals with 3-silyloxyalk-2-en-1-ones, such as (4), afforded 5-ketoacids, such as (5). Treatment of the latter with TFA in CH2Cl2 afforded pyran-2-ones, such as (6-8). It has been found that 1,1-bis(trimethylsilyloxy)ketene acetals can behave as dinucleophile. Functionalized benzo-azoxabicyclo[3.3.1]nonanones (9-12), were prepared by regio- and diastereoselective condensation of 1,1-bis(silyloxy)ketene acetals with isoquinolinium and quinolinium salts and subsequent regioselective and stereospecific iodolactonization. Our next target was the reaction of silyl ketene acetals with pyrazine and quinoxaline. These reactions provide a facile access to a variety of 2,3-benzo-1,4-diaza-7-oxabicyclo[4.3.0]non-2-en-6-ones and 1,4-diaza-7-oxabicyclo[4.3.0]non-2-en-6-ones (13-14). The second part of my research work was concentrated on bis(silyl enol ethers). The TiCl4-mediated [3+3] cyclization of 2,4-bis(trimethylsilyloxy)penta-1,3-diene with 3-silyloxyalk-2-en-1-ones afforded 2-acetylphenols (15), which were transformed into functionalized chromones (16). The Me3SiOTf-mediated condensation of the latter with 1,3-bis(silyl enol ethers) and subsequent domino ′retro-Michael–aldol–lactonization′ reaction afforded 7-hydroxy-6H-benzo[c]chromen-6-ones (17-18). With regard to our on going investigation with bis(silyl enol ethers), we significantly extended the preparative scope of the methodology. We have successfully developed regioselective cyclizations of unsymmetrical 1,1-diacylcyclopentanes, such as 1-acetyl-1-formylcyclopentane, and also studied cyclizations of 2,2-diacetylindane, 1,1-diacetylcyclopent-3-ene and 3,3-dimethylpentane-2,4-dione. In addition, the mechanism of the domino process was studied. We have synthesised spiro[5.4]decenones (19) and that were transfored into bicyclo[4.4.0]deca-1,4-dien-3-ones (20-21), by domino ′Elimination–Double-Wagner-Meerwein-Rearrangement′ reactions. The Lewis acid mediated domino ′[3+3]-cyclization-homo-Michael′ reaction of 1,3-bis-silyl enol ethers with unsymmetrical 1,1-diacylcyclopentanes, such as 1-acetyl-1-formylcyclopentane, allows an efficient one-pot synthesis of functionalized salicylates containing a halogenated side-chain (22-23). A great variety of substitution patterns have been realized by variation of the starting materials and of the Lewis acid. The mechanism of the domino process was studied.
A highly stereoselective recombinant alcohol dehydrogenase aus 'Pseudomonas fluorescens' DSM50106
(2005)
The alcohol dehydrogenase was biochemically characterized. A broad range of arylaliphatic ketones is efficiently reduced to the corresponding optically active (R)-alcohols by a recombinant alcohol dehydrogenase (PF-ADH) produced by overexpression in 'Escherichia coli'. PF-ADH shows high activity and stereoselectivity in the reduction of acetophenone and various derivatives (45-99%), as well as in the reduction of 3-oxy-butyric acid methyl ester and 3-oxy-butyric acid methyl ester and 3-oxy-hexanoic acid ethyl ester (>99%). The highest activity was observed between 10 and 20°C. The copfactor NADH can be efficiently recycled by the addition of 10-20% of iso-propanol. A flow-through-polarimetry-based assay to determine oxidoreductase activity and stereoselectivity is described.
Synthesis and evaluation of pseudosaccharin amine derivatives as potential elastase inhibitions
(2006)
Elastase is a serine protease which by definition is able to solubilize elastin by hydrolytic cleavage.Human Leukocyte Elastase, HLE (EC 3.4.21.37), is involved in deseases such as adult respiatory distress syndrome, pulmonary emphysema, smoking related chronic bronchitits, ischemic-reperfusion injury and rheumatoid arthritis. Hence, the elastase inhibitors have clinical utility in these diseases. Heterocyclic compounds are one of the most important classes of the elastase inhibitiors. In the present work different pseudosaccharin amine derivatives were synthesized and tested against the elastase. The synthesis of pseudosaccharin amine dervatives was carried out from the amines and(1,1-dioxobenzo[d]isothiazol-3-ylsulfanyl)acetonitrile in different solvents. Futhermore, the pseudosaccharin amines were obtained by refluxing the thiosaccarinates in absolute acetic acid. The reaction of 3-ethoxybenzo[d]isothiazole 1,1-dioxide with different amines in dioxane under reflux resulted into the desired pseudosaccharin amine derivatives in higher yields. Pseudosaccharin chloride was also used in the synthesis of these derivatives.A detail study of the synthesis of pseudosaccharin amine dervatives from the above differnt routes is described. Peptides were also synthesized by using the mixed anhydride method. The ester, acid, amide and peptide derivatives were tested against the Porcine Pancreatic Elastase (PPE) and Human Leukocyte Elastase (HLE). The esters were found to be the reversible inhibitors of HLE. The process of the PPE inhibion by cyanomethyl(2S)-2-(1,1-dioxobenzo[d]isothiazol-3-ylamino)-3-methylbutanoate was studied. Michaelis-Menten curve and Lineweaver-Burk double reciprocal plot were constructed in order to study the kinetic of this reaction. The compounds showing high inhibition of HLE were further stuied for determination of their inhibitory constant(Ki). The esters were found to be the higly active compounds against HLE. The cyanomethyl(2S)-2-(1,1-dioxobenzo[d]isothiazol-3-ylamino)-3-methylbutanoate and cyanomethyl(2S,3S)-2-(1,1-dioxobenzo[d]isothiazol-3-ylamino)-3-methylpentanoate showed the competitive reversible inhibition of HLE.The cyanomethyl(2S,3S)-2-(1,1-dioxobenzo[d]isothiazol-3-ylamino)-3-methylpentanoate is highly potent inhibitor of HLE. The possible mechanism of inhibition of elastase by these compounds is discussed. Molecular modelling of some of the ester derivatives is also discussed.