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Impact of proteostasis and the ubiquitin proteasome system on myeloid cell function in the CNS
(2023)
Cellular protein homeostasis (proteostasis) maintains a functional proteome and thus proper cell function. Proteostasis is facilitated by the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS), an intracellular protein turnover machinery ensuring clearance of damaged, misfolded, old and/or unneeded regulatory proteins. This is particularly important in the central nervous system (CNS), where it is linked to neurodegeneration. Disruptions of the proteostasis systems cause the accumulation of misfolded proteins which are commonly seen in progressive neurodegenerative diseases also linked to neuroinflammation. Proper UPS function can protect cells from the accumulation of defective proteins, neurodegeneration and neuroinflammation. Furthermore, it has been found that loss of function mutations in the genes encoding UPS components are linked to systemic inflammation including neuroinflammation and/or neurodevelopmental disorders. Proteasome defects in patients suffering from these disorders cause decreased proteasome activity, accumulation of proteins, activation of proteotoxic stress responses and systemic inflammation. However, the molecular link between proteotoxic stress and the initiation of inflammatory signalling remained unclear. In Article 2, we summarized the importance of the UPS in immune cell proteostasis and function including activation of innate and adaptive immune responses. Although UPS function is notably important in innate immune signalling, the current understanding of the role of UPS in myeloid cell function in the CNS is limited. We also indicated the involvement of impaired UPS function in sterile systemic inflammation including neuroinflammation as well as tumour diseases and pathogen manipulation of immune cells.
To investigate the molecular link behind proteasome impairment and systemic inflammation in the brain, we focused on microglia cells as the only immune residents of the CNS. In Article 1, we used a pharmacological inhibitor called bortezomib which targets β5 and β5i/LMP7 subunit activities in standard proteasome (SP) and immunoproteasome (IP), respectively. We showed for the first time on the molecular level that inhibition of proteasome activity by bortezomib triggers the accumulation of ubiquitylated proteins, proteotoxic stress responses and innate immune signalling activation depending on the induced proteotoxic stress response called unfolded protein response (UPR) in murine microglia. In particular, activation of the inositol-requiring protein 1α arm of UPR upon bortezomib treatment leads to systemic inflammation as indicated by type I interferon (IFN) response.
IP enhance the proteolytic capacity of UPS by rapid clearance of proteins upon immune signalling activation. Microglia, like other immune cells, exhibit constitutive expression of IP as well as SP to maintain their cellular proteostasis. In Manuscript 3, we studied the particular impact of IP impairment on microglial cellular function. We showed accumulation of ubiquitin-modified proteins and activation of proteotoxic stress responses in IP-impaired mouse and human microglia models. Moreover, we identified possible IP substrates in microglia using β5i/LMP7 knockout mice as an IP deficiency model and, examined how IP deficiency affects microglia function. IP deficient microglia affected the ubiquitylation levels of proteins involved in multiple pathways such as immune responses, energy metabolism, cytoskeleton organisation, cell cycle and ribosome function. Based on the molecular analysis, we confirmed sterile activation of innate immune signalling mechanisms in IP impaired microglia. This is driven by the proteotoxic stress sensor protein kinase R (PKR). In addition, we were able to show that IP impairment altered levels of the microglial activation markers, which are also involved in motility, adhesion and phagocytosis of microglia.
In this thesis, we highlight that UPS function is necessary to maintain microglial proteostasis and, that impairment of proteasome activities triggers sterile inflammation in microglia via activation of proteotoxic stress responses. The described activation of innate immune signalling mechanisms in microglia upon proteasome impairment may be considered as new therapeutic targets for patients suffering from rare protesomapathies or other disorders linked to dysregulated immune signalling.
Der Replikationszyklus der Herpesviren ist sehr komplex und im Detail unzureichend verstanden. Die Funktionen und Eigenschaften einiger viraler Proteine sind bisher kaum charakterisiert. Folglich gibt es wenige Strukturmodelle dieser Proteine, wodurch beispielsweise eine rationale Medikamentenentwicklung kaum möglich war. Die Zielstellung dieser Arbeit war, neun dieser Proteine (pUL4, -7, -11, -16, -21, -26, -26.5, -32 und -33) aus dem pseudorabies virus (PrV) zu charakterisieren und nach Möglichkeit deren Struktur aufzuklären. Hierzu wurden die zur Verfügung gestellten Gensequenzen in geeignete bakterielle Expressionsvektoren umkloniert und in E. coli exprimiert. Lösliche Proteine wurden gereinigt und anschließend Kristallisationsexperimenten unterzogen, während unlösliche Proteine zum Teil auf ihre Renaturierbarkeit getestet wurden. Die Strukturen des kristallisierten N-terminalen Teils von pUL26 (Assemblin) wurden mittels Röntgenkristallographie aufgeklärt. Außerdem wurden alle Proteine in silico auf Signalsequenzen, Phosphorylierungen und Sequenzmuster untersucht. Von der N-terminalen Serinproteasedomäne (Assemblin) von pUL26 wurden drei Strukturen durch Röntgenkristallographie bestimmt: eine native dimere, eine inhibierte dimere, sowie eine native monomere Struktur. Letztere ist das erste bekannte Strukturmodell der monomeren Form eines Assemblins. In Verbindung mit den dimeren Strukturen konnte experimentell bestätigt werden, dass die Aktivierung der Assembline über die Verschiebung eines loop bei der Dimerisierung erfolgt. Die Umlagerung dieses loop basiert darauf, dass sich der in der monomeren Form teilweise flexible Dimerisierungsbereich durch die Dimerisierung etwas verändert und eine weitestgehend starre Konformation einnimmt. Die Helix α8 wird etwas verkürzt und die Helix α7 etwas verlängert und begradigt, wodurch sich der Oxyanionenloch-Loop vom Dimerisierungsbereich entfernt und ein ausgedehntes Wasserstoffbrückenbindungsnetzwerk aufbaut. In dieser Konformation stabilisiert der loop das Oxyanionenloch, wodurch die Protease aktiviert wird. Weiterhin wurde durch small-angle X-ray scattering bestätigt, dass der Dimerisierungsgrad von der Assemblin- und Mg²+;-Ionenkonzentration abhängig ist. Diese Informationen zur Dimerisierung des PrV-Assemblins können dazu beitragen, rationale Medikamentenentwicklung zu betreiben. Daraus resultierende Wirkstoffe können die Dimerisierung und somit die Aktivierung dieses Schlüsselproteins verhindern. Durch die hohe Ähnlichkeit der Assembline in anderen Herpesviren, kann die nun bekannte monomere Struktur des PrV-Assemblins als Modell für die monomere Struktur anderer, zum Teil humanpathogener Herpesviren genutzt werden. Demzufolge könnte dieses Modell auch die Entwicklung von Medikamenten beispielsweise gegen das Epstein-Barr virus oder das herpes simplex virus 1 ermöglichen. Es stellte sich zudem heraus, dass die bisher für das PrV-pUL26 bzw. -pUL26.5 vorhergesagte zweite Assemblinschnittstelle (M-site) vermutlich nicht korrekt ist. Es wurde eine andere M-site vorgeschlagen, welche ebenfalls infrage kommt. Eine Charakterisierung in vitro war bei fünf der neun zu untersuchenden Proteine möglich. Die anderen vier Proteine (pUL7, -16, -21 und -32) konnten aus verschiedenen Gründen nicht erfolgreich exprimiert werden. Die Proteine pUL4, pUL26.5 und pUL33 wurden unlöslich exprimiert, wobei pUL33 renaturiert werden konnte. Der Membrananker pUL11 und die N-terminale Serinproteasedomäne von pUL26 konnten löslich exprimiert werden. Untersuchungen in silico ergaben, dass der Membrananker pUL11 aus dem pseudorabies virus wahrscheinlich ein nukleäres Exportsignal trägt, was bisher nicht bekannt war. Es ist zudem wahrscheinlich, dass pUL11 selbst keine definierte Struktur hat, da es mit 63 Aminosäuren ein sehr kleines Protein ist und über Sequenzmuster mit anderen Proteinen interagiert.
Oils and fats from natural origin are sustainable sources for a broad range of economically relevant products in food, feed, fuel, oleochemical, and cosmetic industries. Thereby, a huge variety of lipids or lipid-derived products exist which distinguish themselves by their unique physical properties making them suitable for their individual applications. To obtain such functional lipids in an environmentally friendly manner, enzymes can be employed. In that context, lipases have been proven to be valuable biocatalysts in lipid modification, which are broadly applied in industry. Even though they have been implemented successfully in the dairy, baking, and detergent industries, there is an increasing demand for the expansion of their utilization. New technologies like protein engineering and the implementation of process development are employed in solving this task. Within the enzymes in lipid modification, lipases are the most applied catalysts and in this thesis their utilization was expanded successfully to the implementation of novel separation processes and the production of improved drug delivery matrices.
The pore forming alpha-toxin (hemolysin A, Hla) of Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) is a major virulence factor with relevance for the pathogenicity of this bacterium, which is involved in many cases of pneumonia and sepsis in humans. Until now, the presence of Hla in the body fluids of potentially infected humans could only be shown indirectly, e.g., by the presence of antibodies against Hla in serum samples or by hemolysis testing on blood agar plates of bacterial culture supernatants of the clinical isolates. In addition, nothing was known about the concentrations of Hla actually reached in the body fluids of the infected hosts. Western blot analyses on 36 samples of deep tracheal aspirates (DTA) isolated from 22 hospitalized sepsis patients using primary antibodies against different epitopes of the Hla molecule resulted in the identification of six samples from five patients containing monomeric Hla (approx. 33 kDa). Two of these samples showed also signals at the molecular mass of heptameric Hla (232 kDa). Semiquantitative analyses of the samples revealed that the concentrations of monomeric Hla ranged from 16 to 3200 ng/mL. This is, to our knowledge, the first study directly showing the presence of S. aureus Hla in samples of airway surface liquid in human patients.
The vast majority of RNA splicing in today‘s organisms is achieved by the highly regulated and precise removal of introns from pre-mRNAs via the spliceosome. Here we present a model of how RNA splicing may have occurred in earlier life forms. We have designed a hairpin ribozyme derived spliceozyme that mediates two RNA cleavages and one ligation event at specific positions and thus cuts a segment (intron) out of a parent RNA and ligates the remaining fragments (exons). The cut-out intron then performs a downstream function, acting as a positive regulator of the activity of a bipartite DNAzyme. This simple scenario shows how small RNAs can perform complex RNA processing dynamics, involving the generation of new phenotypes by restructuring segments of given RNA species, as well as delivering small RNAs that may play a functional role in downstream processes.
Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is a mass-produced petroleum-based non-biodegradable plastic that contributes to the global plastic pollution. Recently, biocatalytic degradation has emerged as a viable recycling approach for PET waste, especially with thermophilic polyester hydrolases such as a cutinase (LCC) isolated from a leaf-branch compost metagenome and its variants. To improve the enzymatic PET hydrolysis performance, we fused a chitin-binding domain (ChBD) from Chitinolyticbacter meiyuanensis SYBC-H1 to the C-terminus of the previously reported LCCICCG variant, demonstrating higher adsorption to PET substrates and, as a result, improved degradation performance by up to 19.6% compared to with its precursor enzyme without the binding module. For compare hydrolysis with different binding module, the catalytic activity of LCCICCG-ChBD, LCCICCG-CBM, LCCICCG-PBM and LCCICCG-HFB4 were further investigated with PET substrates of various crystallinity and it showed measurable activity on high crystalline PET with 40% crystallinity. These results indicated that fusing a polymer-binding module to LCCICCG is a promising method stimulating the enzymatic hydrolysis of PET.
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.
With the aim to discover and create suitable biocatalysts for the synthesis of chiral amines in a faster and more efficient way, this thesis includes protein engineering studies (Article I), explores transaminase substrate specificities (Articles II and IV), and an ultrahigh-throughput growth system-based for the directed evolution of amine-forming enzymes (Article III).
The protein engineering studies described in Article I deal with the creation of a (R)-amine transaminase activity in the α-amino acid transaminase scaffold to expand our knowledge of the evolutionary relationship between amine transaminase and α-amino acid transaminase. Article II describes the broadening of the limited substrate scope of transaminases to enable the conversion of bulky substrates. In Article III, a growth selection system is described for an ultra-high throughput screening strategy to accelerate the identification of desired mutants, which can be widely applied to the directed evolution of amine-forming enzymes.
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.
Fast screening of enzyme variants is crucial for tailoring biocatalysts for the asymmetric synthesis of non-natural chiral chemicals, such as amines. However, most existing screening methods either are limited by the throughput or require specialized equipment. Herein, we report a simple, high-throughput, low-equipment dependent, and generally applicable growth selection system for engineering amine-forming or converting enzymes and apply it to improve biocatalysts belonging to three different enzyme classes. This results in (i) an amine transaminase variant with 110-fold increased specific activity for the asymmetric synthesis of the chiral amine intermediate of Linagliptin; (ii) a 270-fold improved monoamine oxidase to prepare the chiral amine intermediate of Cinacalcet by deracemization; and (iii) an ammonia lyase variant with a 26-fold increased activity in the asymmetric synthesis of a non-natural amino acid. Our growth selection system is adaptable to different enzyme classes, varying levels of enzyme activities, and thus a flexible tool for various stages of an engineering campaign.
Abstract
Biocatalysis has found numerous applications in various fields as an alternative to chemical catalysis. The use of enzymes in organic synthesis, especially to make chiral compounds for pharmaceuticals as well for the flavors and fragrance industry, are the most prominent examples. In addition, biocatalysts are used on a large scale to make specialty and even bulk chemicals. This review intends to give illustrative examples in this field with a special focus on scalable chemical production using enzymes. It also discusses the opportunities and limitations of enzymatic syntheses using distinct examples and provides an outlook on emerging enzyme classes.
The definition of Green Chemistry was first formulated at the beginning of the 1990s – 30 years ago and states as follows: “design of chemical products and processes to reduce or eliminate the use and generation of hazardous substances” (Poliakoff et al. 2002). Biocatalysis is one of the examples of “green” chemistry as it is relying on natural or modified enzymes. Today, biocatalysis is a standard technology for the production of chemicals (Straathof et al. 2002).
In this PhD thesis, the implications of biocatalysis using different class of enzymes are discussed: two cytochrome P450 monoxygenases, two kinases and one lyase are shown as tools for the production of bioactive compounds.
The P450 enzymes have a central role in the oxidative metabolism of a wide variety of compounds including the synthesis of endogenous substrates such as steroids and fatty acids. Moreover, P450s catalyze the hydroxylation of non-activated carbon atoms in a regio- and stereospecific fashion avoiding use of protecting groups and several, time-consuming chemical steps.
Here, the recombinant expression and biocatalytic characterization of bacterial CYP107D1 for the regio- and stereoselective hydroxylation of two steroid compounds is reported. Since the natural electron transfer partners of these P450s are unknown, PdX and PdR from P. putida were employed to supply CYP107D1 with the necessary electrons for catalysis. This three-component system was used in bioconversions of two bile acids: LCA and DCA. P450 CYP107D1 exhibits high regio- and stereoselectivity for the tested steroids, giving 6β-hydroxylated products. The properties of the CYP107D1 make this multifaceted P450 monooxygenase an attractive enzyme for the production of novel drug metabolites. Moreover, the crystal structure of the enzyme is known, which provides the basis for developing a protein-engineering strategy aimed at catalytic properties of the CYP107D1
The second enzyme described in the thesis is the self-sufficient cytochrome P450 monooxygenase from Fusarium graminarium (FG067). From the overall structure, it resembles the well investigated CYP102 from Bacillus megaterium (CYP BM3) and the P450 from Fusarium oxysporum (CYPfoxy). In this study, two different strategies to recombinantly produce the fungal P450 monooxygenase P450-FG067, namely (a) producing in E. coli and (b) producing in P. pastoris were investigated. The P450 FG_067 from Fusarium graminarium was successfully overexpressed in P. pastoris. The enzyme was functionally active, converted fatty acid substrates of carbon chain length C10-16 with regiospecificity of the hydroxylating position ω -1, ω - 2 and ω-3, with the highest affinity for capric acid. The hydroxylation at different positions of the fatty acid chain is needed for different chemical industries. For example, ω-HFAs can be used as starting materials for the synthesis of polymers, with high resistance to heat or chemicals (Xiao et al. 2018). Therefore, the application of recombinant enzyme such as self-sufficient P450 FG_067 for a commercial production of HFAs is in high industrial demand.
In this thesis, two kinases were used for the producton of phosphorylated metabolites. Kinases catalyzing N-phosphorylation, which are of synthetic interest because of tedious chemical procedures in selective chemical N-phosphorylations. A highly active and stabile arginine kinase, obtained by cloning and expressing the argK gene from Limulus polyphemus in E. coli, was used in the one-step synthesis of Nω-phospho-L-arginine using the phosphoenolpyruvate/pyruvate kinase system for ATP regeneration. Applying arginine kinase in biocatalysis opens up new opportunities for the selective biocatalytic N-phosphorylation of interesting low-molecular-weight compounds and metabolites.
Another kinase investigated in this thesis was shikimate kinase. The highly active and stable shikimate kinase AroL was achieved by synthesizing the codon-optimized aroL gene and expressing it in high yield in E. coli. Next, shikimate kinase was used in an one-step synthesis of shikimate-3-phosphate using the phosphoenolpyruvate/pyruvate kinase system for ATP regeneration. Development of the described biocatalytic preparation of shikimate-3-phosphate is a superior route incomparison to a tedious multi-step and low yield classical synthesis of this compound. The biocatalytic phosphorylation is of great interest for a commercial production of metabolites and metabolite-like structures.
The last investigeted enzyme in this PhD thesis was argininosuccinate lyase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The argininosuccinate lyase was cloned and overexpressed in E. coli as a highly active and stable biocatalyst. A simple and straightforward biocatalytic asymmetric Michael addition reaction has been established for the synthesis of the key metabolite N-(([(4S)-4-amino-4-carboxybutyl]amino)imino methyl)-L-aspartic acid, commonly referred to as L-argininosuccinate. This one-step addition reaction was developed by running part of the urea cycle in reverse. The use of this argininosuccinate lyase and reaction monitoring by NMR enabled the development of a biocatalytic asymmetric Michael addition reaction as a novel green chemistry route with high molecular economy for the synthesis of this important metabolite at gram scale.
Recent advances in the field of scientific research have helped to understand the structure and functional activities of enzymes, which has in turn led to an increase in their stability, activity and substrate specificity. Nowadays, biocatalysis provide more sustainable, efficient, and less polluting methods for the production of fine chemicals and advanced pharmaceutical intermediates. The biocatalysts used in this thesis are introduced as a technology for the efficient synthesis of biologically active compounds, which is greener, reduces pollution and costs compared to chemical synthesis. In summary, the pharmaceutical industry should use the advantage of the progress of biochemistry to obtain biocatalysts in the production of fine chemicals on an industrial scale, improving the quality of end products and saving costs.
Diese Arbeit beschreibt den Aufbau eines Assays zur Selektion eines Ribozyms, welches die Desaminierung von Adenosin zu Inosin katalysiert. Diese Reaktion spielt im Organismus, wo sie proteinkatalysiert abläuft, eine wichtige Rolle (Nukleotidmetabolismus, RNA-Editing). Zusätzlich besitzt ein solches Ribozym das Potenzial zur gezielten Veränderung von RNA-Sequenzen. Das Projekt hat somit evolutionstheoretische (RNA-Welt-Hypothese) als auch gentherapeutische Relevanz. Zentraler Punkt des vorgestellten Assays ist die Markierung einer Mischung verschiedener RNA-Sequenzen (= Bibliothek) mit dem Substrat Adenosin. Dieses trägt an der exozyklischen Aminogruppe eine Biotinfunktion. Wird diese Bibliothek auf einer festen Phase über die Biotin/Streptavidin-Wechselwirkung immobilisiert und den Selektionsbedingungen unterworfen, werden Spezies mit der gewünschten Aktivität in Lösung entlassen. Diese können eluiert und über RT-PCR angereichert werden. Die Funktionalisierung der RNA-Bibliothek geschieht am 5’-Ende jeder Sequenz durch Transkriptionspriming aus einer chemisch synthetisierten DNA-Bibliothek in Gegenwart der vier NTPs und eines Guanosin-5’-monophosphatderivats, dem „Initiator“. Letzteres ist über die 5’-Phosphatfunktion mit dem biotinylierten Substrat Adenosin verknüpft. Das Initiatormolekül wurde in zwei Strategien synthetisiert. Die erste Strategie fand an der festen Phase unter Verwendung des Phosphoramiditverfahrens statt und lieferte Initiator in nanomolarem Maßstab. Die zweite Strategie bestand aus einer 17-stufigen Synthese in Lösung und ergab fast identisches Initiatormolekül in µmolarem Maßstab. Beide Initiatormoleküle wurden erfolgreich zur Funktionalisierung einer RNA eingesetzt. Zur qualitativen Dokumentation des Einbaus des Initiators wurde eine auf Chemilumineszenzdetektion basierende Methode entwickelt. Dabei wurden die Transkriptionsprodukte auf eine Nylonmembran immobilisiert und mit einem Fusionsprotein aus Alkalischer Phosphatase und Streptavidin inkubiert, welches spezifisch den Biotinrest bindet. Durch Zugabe eines möglichen Substrats der Alkalischen Phosphatase wird ein Chemilumineszenzsignal erzeugt, was über einen Röntgenfilm dokumentiert wurde. Dieser qualitative Nachweis wurde erweitert, um die Einbaueffizienz zu quantifizieren. Dazu wurde eine RNA, welche zu 100% mit dem Initiatormolekül markiert war, mit Hilfe des Phosphoramiditverfahrens hergestellt. Diese als Standard fungierende RNA wurde in definierter Menge zusammen mit definierten Mengen an statistisch funktionalisierten Primingprodukt geblottet. Die Quantifizierung der Chemilumineszenz der Proben erfolgte mit Hilfe eines Photosystems und durch Integration der Signalintensitäten. Dadurch konnte der Anteil der in den durchgeführten Primingreaktionen mit Initiator markierten RNA zu maximal 3 % bestimmt werden. Obwohl eine Erhöhung dieses Wertes z.B. durch Optimierung der Initiatorstruktur wünschenswert ist, ist damit die Funktionalisierung einer RNA-Bibliothek in einer für die Selektion ausreichenden Menge durchaus möglich. Zur Evaluation des Assays wurde der Selektionsschritt simuliert, in welchem ein über das Initiatormolekül festphasengebundenes Ribozym spezifisch zur Selbstspaltung aktiviert wird. Zu diesem Zweck wurden ein Hammerheadriboyzm, ein Hairpinribozym sowie ein DNAzym untersucht. Dabei wurde festgestellt, dass die Spaltaktivität aller drei Systeme durch Funktionalisierung mit dem Initiator in Lösung fast vollständig inhibiert wird, unmarkierte Spezies unter identischen Bedingungen jedoch uneingeschränkte Spaltaktivität zeigen. Die beobachtete Inhibierung beruht auf einem intramolekularen Effekt, der möglicherweise zu einer Verschiebung des Konformerengleichgewichts der Testsysteme hin zu spaltinaktiven Konformeren führt. Zusätzlich wurde die Spaltaktivität des mit Initiator markierten und an einer Festphase immobilisierten Hairpinribozyms untersucht. Auch hier war eine stark verringerte Spaltaktivität zu beobachten, welche jedoch in unspezifischen Wechselwirkungen zwischen Festphase und Ribozym begründet liegen könnten. Die verwendeten Systeme eignen sich offenbar nicht zur Evaluierung des Assays, was jedoch die Möglichkeit offen lässt, dass im geplanten Assay selektierte RNA-Sequenzen die Funktionalisierung mit Initiator tolerieren. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit erlauben den Schluss, dass die gewählte Strategie zur Selektion der Adenosindesaminase einige Punkte beinhaltet, welche nach Möglichkeit optimiert werden müssen, um eine effizientere Selektion durchführen zu können. Prinzipiell ist die Vorraussetzung für die Selektion der Adenosindesaminase durch die beschriebene Methode jedoch geschaffen und kann basierend auf den vorgestellten Ergebnissen in zukünftigen Studien durchgeführt werden.
Die akute Pankreatitis ist eine der häufigsten nicht malignen gastrointestinalen Erkrankungen, die zu Krankenhausaufenthalten führt. Sie ist als Selbstverdau des Pankreas durch seine eigenen Proteasen wie z.B. Trypsin, Elastase und Chymotrypsin definiert. Als Ursprung der Erkrankung wird die frühzeitige intrazelluläre Aktivierung dieser Verdauungsenzyme angesehen. Dies führt zum Zelltod der Azinuszellen und zur Schädigung des Gewebes.
Während der akuten Pankreatitis kommt es in 20% der Fälle zu einem schweren Verlauf der Erkrankung, der mit Organversagen in der Lunge und den Nieren assoziiert ist. Es ist bekannt, dass es zu einer Entzündungsreaktion kommt, bei der große Mengen an Zytokinen ausgeschüttet werden. Leukozyten infiltrieren das Pankreas und verstärken den Gewebeschaden. Es kommt zur Freisetzung von DAMPs, die das angeborene und adaptive Immunsystem aktivieren. Bislang ist nicht gut untersucht, wie das Immunsystem den schweren Verlauf der akuten Pankreatitis beeinflusst und es gibt wenig Theorien über den Organschaden in der Lunge und den Nieren.
In dieser Arbeit lag der Fokus auf dem Organschaden in Lunge und Niere und die Wirkung von Interleukin 33 (IL33) auf die Zellen des angeborenen Immunsystems und deren Einwanderung in verschiedene Organe während der schweren akuten Pankreatitis im Mausmodell. Die schwere akute Pankreatitis wurde mittels Gangligatur und einmaliger Gabe von Caerulein an Tag 2 nach Gangligatur induziert. An Tag 3 nach Induktion wurden die Mäuse getötet und die Organe wurden für weitere Analysen entnommen.
Am dritten Tag nach Induktion der Pankreatitis kam es zu einem Organschaden in der Lunge und den Nieren. In der Lunge fand sich eine Verdickung der Alveolarsepten und eine Verdichtung des Gewebes sowie eine Infiltration von Leukozyten und ein Ödem. In der Niere waren ebenfalls strukturelle Veränderungen zu finden und eine Infiltration von Leukozyten war zu beobachten. In durchflusszytometrischen Analysen der Lunge konnte beobachtet werden, dass CD11b+CD62L+ Monozyten während der akuten Pankreatitis signifikant anstiegen. Mittels RT-DC wurde gezeigt, dass diese Monozyten an Tag 3 signifikant an Größe zugenommen hatten. Mit einer CD11b Färbungen von Lungen und Nieren konnte die Infiltration durch Monozyten bestätigt werden. Unter einer Blockade von Monozyten durch systemische Gabe von anti-CCR2-Antikörpern verringerte sich die Schädigung in Lunge und Niere während der Pankreatitis signifikant.
Diese Daten legen nahe, dass der Organschaden in der schweren akuten Pankreatitis durch infiltrierende Monozyten verursacht wird, die über CD62L (L-Selektin) an die Gefäßwände binden und über ihre Größe Gefäße verstopfen, was in den Kapillaren zur Ischämie führt.
In vitro sezernierten Makrophagen, die mit CCK stimulierten Azinuszellen co-inkubiert wurden, IL33. Im Mausmodell wurde IL33 mittels sST2 blockiert, was die Schädigung des Pankreas in der Pankreatitis reduzierte. In IL33-depletierten Tieren fand sich im Vergleich zum Wildtyp ein geringerer Lungenschaden aber eine unveränderte Nierenschädigung. Somit scheint IL33 eine Rolle bei der Monozyten-vermittelten Organschädigung in der Pankreatitis zu spielen, die sich auf Grund von kompensatorischen Regulationsmechanismen im globalen IL33 Knock-out weniger gut belegen lässt als nach IL33 Inhibition. Die Hemmung von IL33 zur Behandlung der akuten Pankreatitis stellt somit ein vielversprechendes Therapieprinzip dar.
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.
Bradyrhizobium diazoefficiens, a bacterial symbiont of soybean and other leguminous plants, enters a nodulation‐promoting genetic programme in the presence of host‐produced flavonoids and related signalling compounds. Here, we describe the crystal structure of an isoflavonoid‐responsive regulator (FrrA) from Bradyrhizobium, as well as cocrystal structures with inducing and noninducing ligands (genistein and naringenin, respectively). The structures reveal a TetR‐like fold whose DNA‐binding domain is capable of adopting a range of orientations. A single molecule of either genistein or naringenin is asymmetrically bound in a central cavity of the FrrA homodimer, mainly via C–H contacts to the π‐system of the ligands. Strikingly, however, the interaction does not provoke any conformational changes in the repressor. Both the flexible positioning of the DNA‐binding domain and the absence of structural change upon ligand binding are corroborated by small‐angle X‐ray scattering (SAXS) experiments in solution. Together with a model of the promoter‐bound state of FrrA our results suggest that inducers act as a wedge, preventing the DNA‐binding domains from moving close enough together to interact with successive positions of the major groove of the palindromic operator.
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.
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.
Rekombinante Expression und Design der Aminoacylase 1 für die Synthese von N-Acyl-Aminosäuren
(2009)
Im Rahmen der Dissertation wurde die Möglichkeit der enzymatischen N Acylierung von Aminosäuren über eine thermodynamisch kontrollierte Reaktion im wässrigen Medium untersucht. Eine Auswahl von Biokatalysatoren wurde auf ihre Eignung hin untersucht und die Aminoacylase 1 aus der Schweineniere (pAcy1) als Wildtyp-Enzym ausgewählt. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass das primäre Problem bei der pAcy1-katalysierten Synthese der Modellkomponente N-Lauroyl-L-Glutamat (NLLG) in einem sehr ungünstigen thermodynamischen Gleichgewicht liegt. Dieses konnte zwar durch den pH-Wert zugunsten der Synthese verschoben werden, lieferte aber auch unter optimierten Bedingungen nur unzureichende Umsätze. Als primäre Probleme auf Seiten des Biokatalysators wurde ein niedriges Verhältnis zwischen der Synthese und Hydrolyse des Produktes (S/H-Verhältnis) neben einer vergleichsweise schlechten Akzeptanz langkettiger Acyldonoren identifiziert. Um für eine Optimierung des Enzyms die Methoden des rationalen Protein Designs und der gerichteten Evolution zu nutzen, wurde ein rekombinantes Expressionssystem über ein synthetisches Gen der pAcy1 auf dem Vektor pET52(b) realisiert. Durch die Anpassung des Expressionsmediums, der Temperatur sowie der Co-Expression molekularer Chaperone konnten etwa 80 mg aufgereinigtes Enzym pro Liter Fermentationslösung erhalten werden. Das rekombinante Protein wurde biochemisch charakterisiert und die Aktivität gegenüber dem bevorzugten Substrat der pAcy1 N-Acetyl-L-Methionin (NAM) mit 94 U/mg quantifiziert. Die Optimierung des S/H-Verhältnisses der pAcy1 fokussierte sich auf das Potential der katalytischen Base (E146) zur Protonenaufnahme. Als Basis für ein rationales Design wurde ein Strukturmodell erstellt und ein Aspartat an der Position 346 identifiziert, welches den pKa-Wert von E146 maßgeblich beeinflusst. Durch Modellierungen der Elektrostatik im aktiven Zentrum wurde die Substitution von D346 zu Alanin, Asparaginsäure, Glutamat und Glutamin vorgeschlagen und weiterhin die Mutation der katalytischen Base selbst untersucht. Versuche zur Beschreibung des S/H-Verhältnisses von erstellten Varianten der pAcy1 wurden anschließend mit NAM als Modellkomponente durchgeführt. Bei allen Mutanten war ein starker Rückgang der Gesamtaktivität zu verzeichnen, wobei die Restaktivitäten der 146X-Varianten maximal 0,5% und die der 346X-Varianten maximal 9% bei der Hydrolyse betrugen. Durch die parallele Quantifizierung der Synthesereaktion konnte gezeigt werden, dass sich das S/H-Verhältnis durch die Substitution des Asp346 in beide Richtungen verschieben lässt, wobei die gewünschte Erhöhung des Verhältnisses mit einer stark verminderten Gesamtaktivität einhergeht. Die Mutante D346A wies z.B. eine Erhöhung des S/H-Verhältnisses von 0.02 auf 0.18 auf, wobei allerdings die Restaktivität im Vergleich zum Wildtyp-Enzym bei der Synthese 0.2% und die in der Hydrolyse 0.05% betrug. Zur Erklärung dieser Beobachtungen wurde die pH-Abhängigkeit der pAcy1-Varianten für die Hydrolyse des artifiziellen Substrats Furyl-Acyl-M ethionin (FAM) bestimmt. Eine Verschiebung des pH-Optimums ins Saure bzw. ins Basische korrelierte bei D346A bzw. D346E mit der zuvor bestimmten Verschiebung des S/H-Verhältnisses. Weiterhin sollte die Affinität der pAcy1 gegenüber langkettiger Acyldonoren durch gerichtete Evolution erhöht werden. Da aus der Literatur bekannt ist, dass die Reste I177, T345, L370 die Acylbindetasche des Enzyms definieren, wurden diese über iterative Sättigungsmutagenese randomisiert und so etwa 32.000 Varianten der pAcy1 erzeugt. Zur Charakterisierung einer Mutantenbibliothek wurde ein hochdurchsatzfähiges Expressions- und Screeningsystem etabliert, wofür das bereits realisierte Expressionssystem auf den Mikrolitermaßstab übertragen und auf die besonderen Ansprüche hin optimiert wurde. Zur Charakterisierung der Enzyme wurde eine modifizierte Form eines bereits beschriebenen Proteaseassays verwendet, welcher eine kontinuierliche Messung der entstehenden Aminosäure als Produkt der Hydrolysereaktion erlaubte. Eine vorhergehende Selektion aktiver Varianten auf Minimalmedium erlaubt ein effizientes Screening der Mutantenbibliothek. Das Screening- und Selektionssystem wurde bisher mit der Wildtyp-pAcy1 und einer inaktiven Mutante erfolgreich getestet und zeigte Schwankungen von lediglich ±10%. Das noch ausstehende Screening der Mutantenbibliothek wird in laufenden Arbeiten durchgeführt.
N6-methyladenosine (m6A) RNA methylation is an emerging epigenetic modification in recent years and epigenetic regulation of the immune response has been demonstrated, but the potential role of m6A modification in GBM tumor microenvironment (TME) cell infiltration and stemness remain unknown. The m6A modification patterns of 310 GBM samples were comprehensively evaluated based on 21 m6A regulators, and we systematically correlated these modification patterns with TME cell infiltration characteristics and stemness characteristics. Construction of m6Ascore to quantify the m6A modification patterns of individual GBM samples using a principal component analysis algorithm. We identified two distinct patterns of m6A modification. The infiltration characteristics of TME cells in these two patterns were highly consistent with the immunophenotype of the GBM, including the immune activation differentiation pattern and the immune desert dedifferentiation pattern. We also identified two modes of regulation of immunity and stemness by m6A methylation. Stromal activation and lack of effective immune infiltration were observed in the high m6Ascore subtype. Pan-cancer analysis results illustrate a significant correlation between m6AScore and tumor clinical outcome, immune infiltration, and stemness. Our work reveals that m6A modifications play an important role in the development of TME and stemness diversity and complexity. Patients with a low m6AScore showed significant therapeutic advantages and clinical benefits. Assessing the m6A modification pattern of individual tumors will help enhance our knowledge of TME infiltration and stemness characteristics, contribute to the development of immunotherapeutic strategies.
In acinar cells, cellular organelles like zymogene granule, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum and lysosome functions in coordinate way in order to synthesize and secrets large amounts of digestive enzyme. Dysfunction of this organelle, results into enzyme activation within acinar cell; ultimately, acute pancreatitis. While previous studies reported that mitochondrial function is disrupt but mechanism of clearance of these mitochondria remains unknown during pancreatitis. Here we reported that PINK1 and Parkin mediated pathway is activated during pancreatitis and clears dysfunctional mitochondria in-vivo. PINK1 or Parkin deficient acinar cell had energy crisis, decreased ATP production and altered acinar cell fate in-vitro. Inhibiting clearance of dysfunctional mitochondria aggravates experimental pancreatitis severity and delays regeneration/recovery of exocrine tissue after disease via PARIS-PGC-1α pathway. While an attempt to explore therapeutic target of PARIS-PGC-1α pathway by treatment of SRT1720 rescued experimental pancreatitis. Together, PINK1 and Parkin, restricts exocrine pancreatic damage in pancreatitis and accelerates tissue recovery after disease.
Diese Arbeit widmet sich der funktionellen und strukturellen Untersuchung von SCO3201, einem Protein aus der Klasse der TetR-Repressoren, dessen Struktur bisher unbekannt war und das eine geringe sequenzielle Ähnlichkeit zu anderen Mitgliedern seiner Familie besitzt. SCO3201 wurde als Repressorprotein identifiziert, das durch Überexpression sowohl die Antibiotikaproduktion, als auch die morphologische Differenzierung von Streptomyces coelicolor unterdrückt. In früheren Arbeiten wurde gezeigt, dass SCO3201 an mindestens 16 verschiedene Promotor-Sequenzen binden kann. Das Protein konnte in E. coli exprimiert und anschließend isoliert werden. Wegen des Fehlens geeigneter Strukturmodelle gelang eine Strukturlösung mittels Molekularem Ersatz nach erfolgreicher Kristallisation zunächst nicht. Mittels Single-Wavelength-Anomalous-Dispersion-Methode konnte die Struktur des teilweise induzierten Proteins jedoch aufgeklärt werden. Zudem wurde eine Apo-Form des Proteins kristallisiert und ebenfalls strukturell aufgeklärt. Dies erlaubte die Lokalisation der Ligandenbindungstasche und ließ Rückschlüsse auf die Domänenbewegungen zu, die durch den Prozess der Induktion ausgelöst werden. Daneben wurde mittels Röntgenkleinwinkelstreuung die Struktur von SCO3201 in Lösung untersucht, um eventuelle Kristallisationsartefakte auszuschließen. Durch den Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay (EMSA) wurde außerdem die Interaktion zwischen dem Regulator SCO3201 zu seinen Operatoren untersucht.
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.
Poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) is a water‐soluble synthetic vinyl polymer with remarkable physical properties including thermostability and viscosity. Its biodegradability, however, is low even though a large amount of PVA is released into the environment. Established physical‐chemical degradation methods for PVA have several disadvantages such as high price, low efficiency, and secondary pollution. Biodegradation of PVA by microorganisms is slow and frequently involves pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ)‐dependent enzymes, making it expensive due to the costly cofactor and hence unattractive for industrial applications. In this study, we present a modified PVA film with improved properties as well as a PQQ‐independent novel enzymatic cascade for the degradation of modified and unmodified PVA. The cascade consists of four steps catalyzed by three enzymes with in situ cofactor recycling technology making this cascade suitable for industrial applications.
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.
Inflammatory Joint Disease Is a Risk Factor for Streptococcal Sepsis and Septic Arthritis in Mice
(2020)
Septic arthritis is a medical emergency associated with high morbidity and mortality, yet hardly any novel advances exist for its clinical management. Despite septic arthritis being a global health burden, experimental data uncovering its etiopathogenesis remain scarce. In particular, any interplay between septic arthritis and preceding joint diseases are unknown as is the contribution of the synovial membrane to the onset of inflammation. Using C57BL/6 mice as a model to study sepsis, we discovered that Group A Streptococcus (GAS) – an important pathogen causing septic arthritis - was able to invade the articular microenvironment. Bacterial invasion resulted in the infiltration of immune cells and detrimental inflammation. In vitro infected fibroblast-like synoviocytes induced the expression of chemokines (Ccl2, Cxcl2), inflammatory cytokines (Tnf, Il6), and integrin ligands (ICAM-1, VCAM-1). Apart from orchestrating immune cell attraction and retention, synoviocytes also upregulated mediators impacting on bone remodeling (Rankl) and cartilage integrity (Mmp13). Using collagen-induced arthritis in DBA/1 × B10.Q F1 mice, we could show that an inflammatory joint disease exacerbated subsequent septic arthritis which was associated with an excessive release of cytokines and eicosanoids. Importantly, the severity of joint inflammation controlled the extent of bone erosions during septic arthritis. In order to ameliorate septic arthritis, our results suggest that targeting synoviocytes might be a promising approach when treating patients with inflammatory joint disease for sepsis.
Die Monooxygenase TetX wurde zuerst in Bacteroides sp. identifiziert, später auch in Sphingobacterium sp. Tetracycline werden von TetX zu 11a-Hydroxy-Tetracyclinen hydroxyliert, welche nicht-enzymatisch weiterdegradieren und keine zweiwertigen Kationen chelatieren können. Dies führt zur Resistenz von aeroben Bakterien gegen Tetracycline. Die Verbreitung von TetX könnte zu einem späteren Zeitpunkt zu klinischer Relevanz gelangen. Die Kristallstruktur von TetX wurde durch Multiple Anomale Dispersion an einem Selenomethionin-Derivat gelöst. Die native Kristallstruktur von TetX konnte mit den erhaltenen Phasen des TetX-SeMet Experiments gelöst werden. Die Kristallstrukturen von TetX im Komplex mit 7-Iodtetracyclin, 7-Chlortetracyclin, Minocyclin und Tigecyclin wurden gelöst, wobei der Minocyclin-Komplex mit 2.18 Å der am höchsten aufgelöste Komplex ist und so zu den detailliertesten Einblicken der Tetracyclin-Erkennung durch TetX verhilft. Durch Derivatisierung von TetX-Einkristallen mit Xenon, welches ähnliche hydrophobe Eigenschaften wie molekularer Sauerstoff besitzt, wurden zwei besonders hydrophobe Taschen in der Substrat-bindenden Domäne von TetX identifiziert, die dem Sauerstofftransport dienen können. Neben der enzymatischen Inaktivierung von Tetracyclinen durch TetX sind nicht-enzymatische Abbauprozesse von Tetracyclinen allgegenwärtig. Dazu gehört die Umwandlung von Tetracyclinen zu Iso-Tetracyclinen im neutralen bis alkalischen Milieu, was zu einem Bruch der C11-C11a-Bindung und somit zu einer veränderten Anordnung der neuen Ringe A, B, C* und D führt. Die Bindung von Iso-Tetracyclinen zum Tetracyclin-Repressor, der durch die [Mg-Tetracyclin]-Bindung induziert wird, von der Operator-DNA tetO dissoziiert und so die Expression von TetR und dem Effluxprotein TetA reguliert, wurde untersucht. Die Affinität von Iso-Chlortetracyclin für TetR(D) wurde durch Oberflächen-Plasmon-Resonanz bestimmt. Die Kristallstrukturen von TetR(D) im Komplex mit Iso-Chlortetracyclin bzw. Iso-Cyanotetracyclin wurden durch Co-Kristallisationsexperimente gelöst.
Humanity is constantly confronted with the emergence and reemergence of infectious diseases. Many of them produce large or devastating epidemics, like AIDS (HIV) and Ebola. Others have been long neglected, yet pose immediate threats to global public health as evidences the abrupt emergence of Zika virus in South America and its association with microcephaly in babies. The examples illustrate, that many of these diseases are provoked by RNA viruses. One of the first steps in understanding and eliminating those threats is the development of sensitive and rapid diagnostic methods. A general and relatively rapid method is the direct detection and examination of the agent’s genome. However, the nature of (re)emerging RNA viruses poses a series of very specific problems for the design of such methods. Therefore, a systematic approach was proposed for the design of DNA-hybridization-base methods to detect and characterize RNA viruses that will have both a high sensitivity and a specificity sufficiently broad to detect, per reaction, down to a single copy of any of the possible variants of the viral genome.
Following this approach a series of assays were designed, developed or adapted and put into use for detection and characterization of important RNA viruses. One of those viruses is West Nile virus (WNV), which after its explosive introduction into USA become the most widespread flavivirus throughout the world and, consequently, many countries began an intensive monitoring. While existing assay detected predominantly the Lineage 1, in Europa Lineage 2 was expected. Two new RT-qPCR for the detection of both lineages were developed, and reportedly used by independent laboratories. Due to more than 50000 associated deaths per year, the Hepatitis E virus also received an increasing attention to elucidate novel routes of transmission. This virus (especially genotype 3) has the zoonotic potential of transmission from pigs and wild boar to humans. RT-qPCR and nested qPCR for detection and characterization of this virus as well as a methodology for subtyping were developed and the first detected case of subtype 3b in a German wild animal was documented. In addition a novel assay for flaviviruses conformed by a RT-qPCR coupled with a low density DNA microarray was developed, which enabled the identification of WNV in mosquitoes from Greece. A RT-qPCR suitable for surveillance and diagnostic of all known variants of Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus was developed too. A causative agent of hemorrhagic infections, the Ngari virus, was detected and characterized in animal samples from Mauritania. These achievements were supported by the development of software applications for selection and visualization of primers and probes from aligned DNA sequences and for modeling of DNA hybridizations using unaligned sequences.
In conclusion a general methodology for rapid development of sensitive diagnostic methods based in DNA-hybridization technics (PCR, sequencing and microarray) was stablished and successful applications are reported.
Quadruplex-duplex (Q–D) junctions constitute unique structural motifs in genomic sequences. Through comprehensive calorimetric as well as high-resolution NMR structural studies, Q–D junctions with a hairpin-type snapback loop coaxially stacked onto an outer G-tetrad were identified to be most effective binding sites for various polycyclic quadruplex ligands. The Q–D interface is readily recognized by intercalation of the ligand aromatic core structure between G-tetrad and the neighboring base pair. Based on the thermodynamic and structural data, guidelines for the design of ligands with enhanced selectivity towards a Q–D interface emerge. Whereas intercalation at Q–D junctions mostly outcompete stacking at the quadruplex free outer tetrad or intercalation between duplex base pairs to varying degrees, ligand side chains considerably contribute to the selectivity for a Q–D target over other binding sites. In contrast to common perceptions, an appended side chain that additionally interacts within the duplex minor groove may confer only poor selectivity. Rather, the Q–D selectivity is suggested to benefit from an extension of the side chain towards the exposed part of the G-tetrad at the junction. The presented results will support the design of selective high-affinity binding ligands for targeting Q–D interfaces in medicinal but also technological applications.
Abstract
White spot disease (WSD) is one of the most devastating viral infections of crustaceans caused by the white spot syndrome virus (WSSV). A conserved sequence WSSV131 in the DNA genome of WSSV was found to fold into a polymorphic G‐quadruplex structure. Supported by two mutant sequences with single G→T substitutions in the third G4 tract of WSSV131, circular dichroism and NMR spectroscopic analyses demonstrate folding of the wild‐type sequence into a three‐tetrad parallel topology comprising three propeller loops with a major 1 : 3 : 1 and a minor 1 : 2 : 2 loop length arrangement. A thermodynamic analysis of quadruplex formation by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) indicates a thermodynamically more stable 1 : 3 : 1 loop isomer. DSC also revealed the formation of additional highly stable multimeric species with populations depending on potassium ion concentration.
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.
Verschiedene Strategien sind heute in der Entwicklung, um mit Hilfe von RNA Molekülen die genetische Information auf Transkriptebene zu korrigieren. In dieser Arbeit wurde untersucht, ob Twinribozyme durch den Austausch kleiner RNA Fragmente das Potential zur RNA Reparatur und ortsspezifischen RNA Funktionalisierung besitzen. Das Hairpinribozym katalysiert je nach Stabilität des Ribozym-Substrat-Komplexes die Spaltung bzw. die Ligation seines Substrats. Twinribozyme wurden durch Verknüpfung von zwei Hairpinribozymeinheiten entwickelt. Die Spaltung eines RNA Substrates an den zwei katalytischen Stellen produziert drei Fragmente: beide äußeren binden fest an das Twinribozym, während die Bindung des mittleren Fragments durch einen Vier-Nukleotid-Loop im Ribozymstrang destabilisiert wird. Dies fördert dessen Dissoziation gegenüber dessen Rückligation. Die Zugabe eines so genannten Reparaturoligonukleotids, das stabil an das Twinribozym anstelle des mittleren Fragments bindet, begünstigt dessen Assoziation zum Ribozym und dessen Ligation zu den übrigen Substratfragmenten. Das Ergebnis ist ein um vier Nukleotide verlängertes Reparaturprodukt. Dies stellt ein Modell für die Reparatur einer Vier-Nukleotid-Deletion auf mRNA Ebene dar. Erstes Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, die bestehende Reaktion kinetisch und thermodynamisch zu charakterisieren. Weiter wurde das Potential von Twinribozymen für die Reparatur anderer RNA Defekte und die ortsspezifische RNA Funktionalisierung untersucht. Schließlich wurde die Twinribozym vermittelte Reparaturreaktion in Zellkulturen getestet. Beim ursprünglichen Vier-Nukleotid-Deletionsmodell wurden unter äquimolaren Konzentrationen aller Fragmente und bei 10 mM Magnesiumchlorid und 37 °C 35 % Reparaturprodukt erhalten. Kinetische Untersuchungen jeder Einzelreaktion konnten zeigen, dass die Tamdemkonfiguration des Twinribozyms die Spalt- und Ligationseigenschaften nicht beeinträchtigt. In thermodynamischen und kinetischen Bindungsuntersuchungen von Modellduplexen, die der Austauschregion ähneln, wurde gezeigt, dass die Struktur des Ribozym-Substrat-Komplexes den Austausch der mittleren Fragmente stark fördert. Eine Voraussetzung zur biophysikalischen und biochemischen Untersuchungen von RNA Molekülen ist ihre ortsspezifische Markierung. Dies wird für bis zu 80 Nukleotide lange RNA Stränge durch chemische Synthese erreicht. Längere modifizierte RNA Moleküle werden mühsam durch Ligation mehrerer Stränge synthetisiert. Eine andere Möglichkeit besteht darin, native RNAs durch in situ Hybridisierung zu markieren. Keine Methode steht somit zur Verfügung, um in vitro Transkripte oder native RNAs intern und kovalent zu modifizieren. Ein synthetisches Substrat konnte ohne Ausbeuteverluste mit verschiedenen Fluoreszenzmolekülen, die chemisch in das Reparaturoligonukleotid eingebaut wurden, mit dem Twinribozym markiert werden. Verschiedene Transkripte wurden ebenfalls erfolgreich mit dem Twinribozym funktionalisiert. Drei verschiedene Modelle wurden untersucht: die Markierung der Transkripte resultierte entweder in einer Verlängerung um vier Nukleotide, in der Einführung von drei Einzelbasenmutationen oder in gar keinem Sequenzunterschied. Um die Ribozymzugänglichkeit der Zielsequenzen zu verbessern wurden erhöhte Temperaturen sowie DNA Oligonukleotide verwendet, die an das Transkript im Bereich der Flanken zur Ribozymbindungssequenz binden. Markierungsausbeuten von jeweils 53, 47 und 11 % wurden erzielt. Die potentielle Anwendung von Twinribozymen für die therapeutische RNA Reparatur erfordert eine effektive Zellaktivität. In vitro Versuche konnten zeigen, dass Twinribozyme unter zellähnlichen Bedingungen aktiv sind. Ein Versuch, die bestehende in vitro Reaktion in menschlichen Zellkulturen durchzuführen und das Reparaturprodukt nach Zelllyse nachzuweisen, scheiterte, da das Ribozym während der Analyse nicht deaktiviert werden konnte. Weiter wurde ein Luciferasereportergen durch die Einführung verschiedener Mutationen so deaktiviert, dass ein neues entwickeltes Twinribozym die Fehler auf mRNA Ebene reparieren sollte. In vitro Versuche mit kurzen synthetischen Substraten zeigten, dass das Ribozym die Fehler effizient prozessiert. Reparaturansätze mit den mutierten Transkripten lieferten aber Reparaturausbeuten unter 1 %, möglicherweise wegen der schlechten Ribozymzugänglichkeit der langen Transkripten. Durch Lumineszenzzellversuche konnte leider keine RNA Reparatur nachgewiesen werden. Twinribozyme erlauben den Austausch kurzer RNA Fragmente innerhalb synthetischer RNAs und Transkripte und akzeptieren dabei modifizierte Sequenzen. Dies öffnet Twinribozymen den Weg als molekulares Werkzeug für die RNA Reparatur und die ortsspezifische RNA Funktionalisierung. Die Erarbeitung von Möglichkeiten, die schlechte Zugänglichkeit der Zielsequenzen zu umgehen, sowie der Erhalt positiver Zellversuche werden über die Verwendung dieses potentialreichen RNA Werkzeugs entscheiden.
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.
Abstract
Rice husk, one of the main side products in the rice production, and its sustainable management represent a challenge in many countries. Herein, we describe the use of this abundant agricultural bio‐waste as feedstock for the preparation of silver‐containing carbon/silica nano composites with antimicrobial properties. The synthesis was performed using a fast and cheap methodology consisting of wet impregnation followed by pyrolysis, yielding C/SiO2 composite materials doped with varying amounts of silver from 28 to 0.001 wt %. The materials were fully characterized and their antimicrobial activity against ESKAPE pathogens, namely E. faecium, S. aureus, K. pneumoniae, A. baumannii, P. aeruginosa, and E. coli, and the pathogenic yeast C. albicans was investigated. Sensitivities of these strains against the prepared materials were demonstrated, even with exceptional low amounts of 0.015 m% silver. Hence, we report a straightforward method for the synthesis of antimicrobial agents from abundant sources which addresses urgent questions like bio‐waste valorization and affordable alternatives to increasingly fewer effective antibiotics.
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.
This thesis deals with the process considerations and optimizations of a whole-cell enzyme cascade reaction for the synthesis of ɛ-caprolactone. The enzyme cascade synthesis of ɛ-caprolactone has been conceptualized and verified using a dehydrogenase and a monooxygenase. The advantage of this enzyme combination is the closed-loop co-factor regeneration. Dehydrogenase and monooxygenase expressed in discrete whole cells were applied in defined ratio to conceptualize the cascade reaction. This necessitates the use of separate co-factor regeneration system due to impermeability of the E. coli cell wall to the co-factor. Article I deal with the design and optimization of dehydrogenase and monooxygenase co-expression in a same E. coli cell. In Article II, the cascade reaction was upscaled and a fed-batch process was realized. Following which, the important reaction metrices were analyzed and optimized. Article III extends the two-enzyme cascade with a lipase. The use of lipase helps to overcome the product inhibition of monooxygenase by ɛ-caprolactone.
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.
Die in dieser Arbeit durchgeführten Kristallstrukturanalysen der ersten bakteriellen Chalconisomerase (CHI) bilden die Grundlage für das strukturelle Verständnis der Flavonoiddegradation von Eubacterium ramulus. Das Enzym zeigt eine offene und eine geschlossene Lid-Konformation, die das aktive Zentrum vollständig vom Solvens abgrenzt. Durch SAXS-Messungen konnte gezeigt werden, dass sich diese beiden Konformationen im Solvens in einem dynamischen Gleichgewicht befinden und nur eine geringe Energiebarriere zur Schließung überwunden werden muss. Die Lokalisation des aktiven Zentrums konnte durch Cokristallisation mit dem Substrat (2S)-Naringenin bewiesen werden. Der Reaktionsmechanismus konnte durch Mutagenese-Studien und spezifischen 1H/2H-Austausch durch NMR bewiesen werden. Trotz jeglicher fehlender funktionaler Verwandtschaft zeigt die Tertiärstruktur der bakteriellen CHI große Ähnlichkeiten zu der ferredoxin-like Faltung der Chloritdismutase aus Dechloromonas aromatica und dem mit Stress verbundenen Protein SP1 aus Populus tremula. Ein Vergleich der bakteriellen CHI mit der pflanzlichen CHI von Medicago sativa zeigt, dass deren 3D-Struktur in keinem verwandtschaftlichen Verhältnis steht. Dies suggeriert eine konvergente Evolution der beiden Chalconisomerasen ausgehend von unterschiedlichen Vorläuferproteinen. Anhand von Strukturaufklärungen der (R)-selektiven Amin-Transaminase aus Aspergillus fumigatus konnten erste Informationen über die strukturellen Voraussetzungen zur (R)-Selektivität dieser neuen Enzymklasse gewonnen werden. Die in silico Experimente zeigen, dass ähnlich zu den BCATs und D-ATAs das aktive Zentrum der (R)-ATA in eine große und eine kleine Bindetasche unterteilt ist. Dies konnte strukturell über den Inhibitorkomplex verifiziert werden. Die De-/Protonierung des Substrates durch das katalytische aktive Lys179 kann ausschließlich von der si-Seite erfolgen, sodass es zur Bildung des (R)-Enantiomers kommt. Der Mechanismus zur Bindung polarer Substrate (dual substrate recognition) wurde durch einen kovalenten Inhibitorkomplex und Mutagenese-Studien belegt und ist auf ein konserviertes Arginin im active site loop zurückzuführen.
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.
Combining solid acid catalysts with enzyme reactions in aqueous environments is challenging because either very acidic conditions inactivate the enzymes, or the solid acid catalyst is neutralized. In this study, Amberlyst-15 encapsulated in polydimethylsiloxane (Amb-15@PDMS) is used to deprotect the lignin depolymerization product G−C2 dioxolane phenol in a buffered system at pH 6.0. This reaction is directly coupled with the biocatalytic reduction of the released homovanillin to homovanillyl alcohol by recombinant horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase, which is subsequently acylated by the promiscuous acyltransferase/hydrolase PestE_I208A_L209F_N288A in a one-pot system. The deprotection catalyzed with Amb-15@PDMS attains up to 97 % conversion. Overall, this cascade enables conversions of up to 57 %.
An Enzyme Cascade Reaction for the Recovery of Hydroxytyrosol Dervatives from Olive Mill Wastewater
(2022)
Abstract
The valorization of olive mill wastewaters (OMWW), a by‐product of the olive milling, is getting rising attention. Lipophilization of the main phenolic compound 3‐hydroxytyrosol (HT) could facilitate its extraction. An immobilized variant of the promiscuous hydrolase/acyltransferase from Pyrobaculum calidifontis VA1 (PestE) was used to perform acetylation in water using ethyl acetate as acyl donor. PestE was used in a segmented flow setting to allow continuous operation. Additionally, HT precursors were made accessible by pretreatment with almond β‐glucosidase and the hydrolytic activity of PestE_I208A_L209F_N288A.
Abstract
Olive mill wastewater (OMWW) is produced annually during olive oil extraction and contains most of the health‐promoting 3‐hydroxytyrosol of the olive fruit. To facilitate its recovery, enzymatic transesterification of hydroxytyrosol (HT) was directly performed in an aqueous system in the presence of ethyl acetate, yielding a 3‐hydroxytyrosol acetate rich extract. For this, the promiscuous acyltransferase from Pyrobaculum calidifontis VA1 (PestE) was engineered by rational design. The best mutant for the acetylation of hydroxytyrosol (PestE_I208A_L209F_N288A) was immobilized on EziG2 beads, resulting in hydroxytyrosol conversions between 82 and 89 % in one hour, for at least ten reaction cycles in a buffered hydroxytyrosol solution. Due to inhibition by other phenols in OMWW the conversions of hydroxytyrosol from this source were between 51 and 62 %. In a preparative scale reaction, 13.8 mg (57 %) of 3‐hydroxytyrosol acetate was extracted from 60 mL OMWW.
In this thesis, new catalysts as well as unprecedented approaches for the
valorization of sustainable carbon sources were investigated. The first part deals with the design of catalysts for photocatalytic CO2 reduction (Articles I&II). The promiscuous activity of phenolic acid decarboxylase from Bacillus subtilis (BsPAD) was found to catalyze CO2 reduction (Article I). This cofactor-free enzyme could facilitate the replacement of (noble) metal catalysts regularly employed in CO2 reduction. Based on these findings, additional enzyme catalysts were identified for photocatalytic CO2 reduction. The second part (Articles III-VII) focuses on the valorization of resources obtained from biomass, such as olive mill waste water or lignin, by the promising acyltransferases/hydrolase PestE from Pyrobaculum calidifontis VA1 (Articles IV-VII). The potential of PestE for the valorization of sustainable sources has been demonstrated by enzyme engineering and use in (chemo)enzymatic cascade reactions leading to value-added products.
Amine transaminases (ATAs) are pyridoxal-5′-phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzymes that catalyze the transfer of an amino group from an amino donor to an aldehyde and/or ketone. In the past decade, the enzymatic reductive amination of prochiral ketones catalyzed by ATAs has attracted the attention of researchers, and more traditional chemical routes were replaced by enzymatic ones in industrial manufacturing. In the present work, the influence of the presence of an α,β-unsaturated system in a methylketone model substrate was investigated, using a set of five wild-type ATAs, the (R)-selective from Aspergillus terreus (Atr-TA) and Mycobacterium vanbaalenii (Mva-TA), the (S)-selective from Chromobacterium violaceum (Cvi-TA), Ruegeria pomeroyi (Rpo-TA), V. fluvialis (Vfl-TA) and an engineered variant of V. fluvialis (ATA-256 from Codexis). The high conversion rate (80 to 99%) and optical purity (78 to 99% ee) of both (R)- and (S)-ATAs for the substrate 1-phenyl-3-butanone, using isopropylamine (IPA) as an amino donor, were observed. However, the double bond in the α,β-position of 4-phenylbut-3-en-2-one dramatically reduced wild-type ATA reactivity, leading to conversions of <10% (without affecting the enantioselectivity). In contrast, the commercially engineered V. fluvialis variant, ATA-256, still enabled an 87% conversion, yielding a corresponding amine with >99% ee. Computational docking simulations showed the differences in orientation and intermolecular interactions in the active sites, providing insights to rationalize the observed experimental results.
Abstract
Methylation of free hydroxyl groups is an important modification for flavonoids. It not only greatly increases absorption and oral bioavailability of flavonoids, but also brings new biological activities. Flavonoid methylation is usually achieved by a specific group of plant O‐methyltransferases (OMTs) which typically exhibit high substrate specificity. Here we investigated the effect of several residues in the binding pocket of the Clarkia breweri isoeugenol OMT on the substrate scope and regioselectivity against flavonoids. The mutation T133M, identified as reported in our previous publication, increased the activity of the enzyme against several flavonoids, namely eriodictyol, naringenin, luteolin, quercetin and even the isoflavonoid genistein, while a reduced set of amino acids at positions 322 and 326 affected both, the activity and the regioselectivity of the methyltranferase. On the basis of this work, methylated flavonoids that are rare in nature were produced in high purity.
Abstract
Halide methyltransferases (HMTs) enable the enzymatic synthesis of S‐adenosyl‐l‐methionine (SAM) from S‐adenosyl‐l‐homocysteine (SAH) and methyl iodide. Characterisation of a range of naturally occurring HMTs and subsequent protein engineering led to HMT variants capable of synthesising ethyl, propyl, and allyl analogues of SAM. Notably, HMTs do not depend on chemical synthesis of methionine analogues, as required by methionine adenosyltransferases (MATs). However, at the moment MATs have a much broader substrate scope than the HMTs. Herein we provide an overview of the discovery and engineering of promiscuous HMTs and how these strategies will pave the way towards a toolbox of HMT variants for versatile chemo‐ and regioselective biocatalytic alkylations.
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.
Unter Verwendung von rekombinanten Schweineleberesterasen wurden zwei Chemoenzymatische Prozesse sukkzessive etabliert, optmiert und im Maßstab vergößert. Es wurden zwei chirale Synthesebausteine beispielhaft hergestellt und charakterisiert.
Die Arbeit gibt einen Einblick in die Prozessoptimierung von chemoenzymatischen Syntheserouten unter ökonomischen Aspekten.
Abstract
The efficient multifunctionalization by one‐pot or cascade catalytic systems has developed as an important research field, but is often challenging due to incompatibilities or cross‐reactivities of the catalysts leading to side product formation. Herein we report the stereoselective preparation of cis‐ and trans‐4‐aminocyclohexanol from the potentially bio‐based precursor 1,4‐cyclohexanedione. We identified regio‐ and stereoselective enzymes catalyzing reduction and transamination of the diketone, which can be performed in a one‐pot sequential or cascade mode. For this, we identified regioselective keto reductases for the selective mono reduction of the diketone to give 4‐hydroxycyclohexanone. The system is modular and by choosing stereocomplementary amine transaminases, both cis‐ and trans‐4‐aminocyclohexanol were synthesized with good to excellent diastereomeric ratios. Furthermore, we identified an amine transaminase that produces cis‐1,4‐cyclohexanediamine with diastereomeric ratios >98 : 2. These examples highlight that the high selectivity of enzymes enable short and stereoselective cascade multifunctionalizations to generate high‐value building blocks from renewable starting materials.
Introduction
The aim of our research is a stereoselective synthesis development of 4-aminocyclohexanol by the application of a keto reductase (KRED) and an amine transaminase (ATA). 4-Aminocyclohexanol is a valuable precursor for active pharmaceutical ingredients, for example, lomibuvir (a HCV protease inhibitor), ambroxol (a secretolytic agent) and other bioactive molecules. Today, the trans-4-aminocyclohexanol is accessed via Ni-catalyzed synthetic procedure giving moderate yields. In our project we perform cis- and trans-4-aminocyclohexanol synthesis from 1,4-cyclohexanedione (a bio-based precursor) by an one-pot approach combining sequentially a KRED and an ATA as catalysts. For this, we envisaged two multistep enzymatic procedures. The route A would involve 4-hydroxycyclohexanone formation from 1,4-cyclohexanedione via a KRED-catalyzed monoreduction and a further transamination mediated by an ATA towards 4-aminocyclohexanol. The route B would consist of switching the steps of the previous sequential approach, that is, a monoamination of the diketone to yield 4-aminocyclohexanone, and the subsequent reduction of the remaining carbonyl group. Only route A turned out to be feasible, and we performed 4-aminocyclohexanol synthesis at the preparative scale in the sequential and tandem modes. Depending on the ATA, both isomers can be obtained.
Zinc finger proteins play pivotal roles in health and disease and exert critical functions in various cellular processes. A majority of zinc finger proteins bind DNA and act as transcription factors. B-cell lymphoma/leukemia 11B (BCL11B) represents one member of the large family of zinc finger proteins. The N-terminal domain of BCL11B was shown to be crucial for BCL11B to exert its proper function by homodimerization. Here, we describe an easy and fast preparation protocol to yield the fluorescently tagged protein of the recombinant N-terminal BCL11B zinc finger domain (BCL11B42-94) for in vitro studies. First, we expressed fluorescently tagged BCL11B42-94 in E. coli and described the subsequent purification utilizing immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography to achieve very high yields of a purified fusion protein of 200 mg/L culture. We proceeded with characterizing the atypical zinc finger domain using circular dichroism and size exclusion chromatography. Validation of the functional fluorescent pair CyPet-/EYFP-BCL11B42-94 was achieved with Förster resonance energy transfer. Our protocol can be utilized to study other zinc finger domains to expand the knowledge in this field.
Proteostasis is critical for cells to maintain the balance between protein synthesis, quality control, and degradation. This is particularly important for myeloid cells of the central nervous system as their immunological function relies on proper intracellular protein turnover by the ubiquitin-proteasome system. Accordingly, disruption of proteasome activity due to, e.g., loss-of-function mutations within genes encoding proteasome subunits, results in systemic autoinflammation. On the molecular level, pharmacological inhibition of proteasome results in endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress-activated unfolded protein response (UPR) as well as an induction of type I interferons (IFN). Nevertheless, our understanding as to whether and to which extent UPR signaling regulates type I IFN response is limited. To address this issue, we have tested the effects of proteasome dysfunction upon treatment with proteasome inhibitors in primary murine microglia and microglia-like cell line BV-2. Our data show that proteasome impairment by bortezomib is a stimulus that activates all three intracellular ER-stress transducers activation transcription factor 6, protein kinase R-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase and inositol-requiring protein 1 alpha (IRE1α), causing a full activation of the UPR. We further demonstrate that impaired proteasome activity in microglia cells triggers an induction of IFNβ1 in an IRE1-dependent manner. An inhibition of the IRE1 endoribonuclease activity significantly attenuates TANK-binding kinase 1-mediated activation of type I IFN. Moreover, interfering with TANK-binding kinase 1 activity also compromised the expression of C/EBP homologous protein 10, thereby emphasizing a multilayered interplay between UPR and type IFN response pathway. Interestingly, the induced protein kinase R-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase-activation transcription factor 4-C/EBP homologous protein 10 and IRE1-X-box-binding protein 1 axes caused a significant upregulation of proinflammatory cytokine interleukin 6 expression that exacerbates STAT1/STAT3 signaling in cells with dysfunctional proteasomes. Altogether, these findings indicate that proteasome impairment disrupts ER homeostasis and triggers a complex interchange between ER-stress sensors and type I IFN signaling, thus inducing in myeloid cells a state of chronic inflammation.
Ribozyme sind katalytisch aktive RNA-Strukturen, die unter anderem in viralen Satelliten-RNAs entdeckt wurden, wo sie durch reversible Spaltung des Phosphatrückgrates die virale Replikation unterstützen. Durch gezielte strukturelle Manipulation von Ribozymen entstehen wertvolle Werkzeuge, die in vielen bioanalytischen, biotechnologischen und gentherapeutischen Bereichen Anwendung finden. Diese Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit dem funktionalen Design von verschiedenen Ribozymmotiven, deren kinetische und strukturelle Charakterisierung sowie deren potentielle Anwendung. In einem ersten Projekt sollten durch rationales Design RNA-Schalter, sogenannte Riboswitches, entwickelt werden. Die Aktivität dieser schaltbaren Ribozyme hängt von einem externen Kofaktor ab. Solche Konstrukte können durch gezielte Kombination einer natürlichen Ribozymdomäne mit einer Aptamerdomäne, die spezifisch einen Kofaktor (darunter Nukleinsäuren, Peptide, organische Moleküle und Metallionen) binden kann, gewonnen werden. Durch Bindung dieses Kofaktors wird eine konformelle Änderung innerhalb der Ribozymstruktur erzwungen die einen Anstieg- oder Abfall der katalytischen Aktivität zur Folge hat. Derartige Systeme besitzen biosensorisches Potential. Betrachtet man den Kofaktor als Analyten, kann das Bindungsereignis, also die Detektion, über ein Spaltereignis beobachtet werden. Die Reversibilität solcher Detektionssysteme konnte bisher nicht demonstriert werden, würde aber deren Attraktivität und Anwendungspotential erhöhen. In dieser Arbeit wurden Ribozyme auf Basis des Hairpin-Motivs entwickelt, die in Abhängigkeit von Flavinmononukleotid (FMN) aktiv sind. Um die Reversibilität des Prozesses zu gestatten, müsste FMN beliebig aus der Aptamerdomäne entfernt und in diese wieder eingelagert werden können. Dies sollte über die Kontrolle der Molekülgeometrie des Kofaktors erfolgen. Durch chemische Reduktion von FMN werden strukturelle und elektronische Veränderungen innerhalb des Moleküls hervorgerufen, die die Bindungsaffinität verringern sollten. Versuche mit Reduktionsmitteln konnten die Reversibilität des Schaltvorganges in einem ersten Ansatz demonstrieren. Um ein mehrmaliges, kontrolliertes Schalten zu gestatten, wurde zur gezielten Manipulation des Oxidationszustandes von FMN eine elektrochemische Zelle entwickelt. Dazu musste das klassische Drei-Elektroden-System dem hier vorliegenden System angepasst werden. Zum einen muss die quantitative Reduktion/Oxidation von FMN in einem kleinen Probenvolumen von einigen Mikrolitern gewährleistet werden, zum anderen sollte unter Sauerstoffausschluss gearbeitet werden, um unerwünschte Reoxidationsprozesse zu verhindern. Mit der entwickelten Zelle konnte in einem Spaltexperiment ansatzweise die Verringerung der Ribozymaktivität durch elektrochemische Reduktion des Kofaktors demonstriert werden. Schnelles und präzises Schalten des Systems wurde durch Diffusionsprozesse der reagierenden Spezies zur Elektrodenoberfläche limitiert und konnte mit dieser Anordnung nicht demonstriert werden. Neben kinetischen Studien sollten strukturelle Untersuchungen die Charakterisierung des RNA-Schalters vervollständigen. Hierbei wurden die konformellen Änderungen innerhalb des Ribozyms bei Bindung des Kofaktors ESR-spektroskopisch studiert. Allgemein müssen dazu Nukleinsäuren mit paramagnetischen Spinsonden markiert werden. In diesem Zusammenhang wurden Synthese- und Markierungsmethoden zum Erhalt spinmarkierter Oligonukleotide etabliert. Ein zweites Projekt beschäftigte sich mit der Entwicklung von Reparatursystemen auf Basis kleiner katalytischer RNA-Motive. Die in diesem Zusammenhang entwickelten Twinribozyme besitzen großes Potential zur Reparatur von Gendefekten auf RNA-Ebene. Hierbei wird ein kurzer Sequenzabschnitt innerhalb eines RNA-Stranges gegen eine alternative Sequenz durch doppelte Spaltung und Ligation ausgetauscht. Diese Methode sollte es ermöglichen, mutierte Sequenzbereiche auf mRNA-Ebene gegen die entsprechend korrekte Sequenz zu ersetzen und Gendefekte zu beheben. Twinribozyme entstehen durch Duplikation zweier katalytischer Motive und wurden als erstes unter Verwendung des Hairpinribozymmotivs entwickelt. Da nicht alle Substratsequenzen vom Hairpinribozym toleriert werden, wurde im Rahmen dieser Arbeit die Eignung eines Hammerheadribozyms zur Entwicklung eines Twinribozyms überprüft, um die Palette derartiger Werkzeuge zu erweitern. Gezeigt werden konnte, dass der Austausch einer Sequenz zwar katalysiert wird, die geringe Produktausbeute von nur 3% eine gentherapeutische Anwendung zunächst noch in Frage stellt. Hier sollten strukturelle Optimierungen des Systems zu einem besseren Ergebnis führen. Insgesamt konnte demonstriert werden, dass die Aktivität von RNA-Enzymen gezielt durch die Einführung von charakteristischen Strukturelementen manipuliert und kontrolliert werden kann und somit Systeme mit hohem Anwendungspotential geschaffen wurden.
Enzyme sind bekannt als Biokatalysatoren, die spezifisch für ein oder wenige Substrate und ihre zu katalysierende Reaktion sind. Die Fähigkeit einiger Enzyme, mehr als nur eine bestimmte chemische Umsetzung zu katalysieren, bezeichnet man als Promiskuität. Einige Enzyme verfügen über ein breites Substratspektrum und können selbst strukturell verschiedene Substrate umsetzen. Man spricht hierbei von der Substratpromiskuität (substrate promiscuity) der Enzyme. Eine weitere Klasse der Promiskuität wird als Konditionspromiskuität (condition promiscuity) bezeichnet. Hierzu zählen Enzyme, die auch bei nicht-natürlichen Reaktionsbedingungen wie hohen Temperaturen, extremen pH-Werten oder in wasserfreiem Medium katalytische Aktivität aufweisen. Die katalytische Promiskuität (catalytic promiscuity) bildet die dritte Gruppe der Enzympromiskuität. Enzyme, die über diese Art der Promiskuität verfügen, zeichnen sich durch eine breite Reaktionsspezifität bei der Katalyse alternativer Reaktionen aus. Zudem lehren uns die Strukturen von über 30.000 Proteinen, dass die Natur nur von einem limitierten Repertoire von Proteingerüsten Gebrauch gemacht hat, um dennoch eine Vielzahl an verschiedensten Reaktionen herbeizuführen. Die Vielfältigkeit der Proteingerüste ist auf einige wenige Vorfahren zurückzuführen, deren Gerüst als Basis zur Generierung von Familien und Superfamilien diente. Die Überreste dieses Prozesses spiegeln sich in den ähnlichen Strukturen und katalytischen Resten der Familienmitglieder wieder. Über die Millionen von Jahren der Evolution haben sich jedoch die Sequenzähnlichkeiten der Mitglieder einer Familie stark verändert. Durch die Untersuchung der Beziehungen von Enzymen mit α/β-Hydrolasefaltung am Beispiel der Generierung von Epoxidhydrolaseaktivität in das Proteingerüst der Pseudomonas fluorescens Esterase (PFE) sollte die verwandtschaftliche Beziehung beider Enzyme näher dargestellt werden. Mit Hilfe der Methoden der positionsgerichteten Mutagenese und der gerichteten Evolution war es möglich eine Vielzahl von Mutanten zu kreieren. Zur Durchmusterung der Mutantenbliotheken kam sowohl ein neu entwickelter Agarplatten-Assay, als auch ein optimiertes Hochdurchsatz-Testsystem zum Einsatz. Mittels dieser Testformate konnten Mutanten der PFE identifiziert werden, die aktiv gegenüber Epoxiden sind. Des Weiteren erfolgte die genaue Charakterisierung der generierten Varianten.
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.
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.
Synthesen modifizierter Nukleoside zur Aufklärung der Struktur und Funktion von RNA-Molekülen
(2019)
Im Fokus dieser Arbeit lagen die Synthesen verschiedener Nukleosidderivate zur Aufklärung der Struktur und Funktion von RNA-Molekülen. Es wurden erfolgreich zwei Adenosinderivate synthetisiert und die für die post-synthetische Markierung benötigte Aminofunktion entweder mit Hilfe der Sonogashira-Kupplung an der Position C2 oder der Heck-Reaktion an der Position C8 eingebaut. Um auch Zugang zu modifizierten Cytidinen zu erhalten, wurde eine Synthesestrategie für ein aktiviertes Uridinderivat entworfen, um dieses nach der chemischen Synthese mittels Phosphoramiditverfahren, während der Reinigung, in das dazugehörige Cytidinderivat umzuwandeln. Hierzu wurden die funktionellen Gruppen erfolgreich für die chemische Oligonukleotidsynthese geschützt, die Modifikation an der Position C5 mit Hilfe der Sonogashira-Kupplung eingebaut und die Position C4 mit Hilfe von TIPS-Cl (2,4,6-Triisopropylbenzolsulfonylchlorid) aktiviert. In Vorversuchen konnte die erfolgreiche Umwandlung in das Cytidinderivat experimentell bestätigt werden. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurde der Einfluss ausgewählter basenmodifizierter Nukleoside auf den Charakter einer doppelsträngigen RNA untersucht. Dazu wurden die Schmelzkurven und Schmelzpunkte modifizierter und unmodifizierter Oligonukleotide gemessen und ausgewertet. Die erhaltenen Daten lassen darauf schließen, dass der Einbau von basenmodifizierten Nukleosiden zur Senkung des Schmelzpunktes führt, jedoch nicht zur Veränderung des doppelsträngigen Charakters. Eine anschließende Markierung eines modifizierten Oligonukleotids mit dem Farbstoff ATTO 680 scheint nur einen marginalen Einfluss auf den Schmelzpunkt, im Vergleich zu den Schmelzpunkten der modifizierten Oligonukleotide, zu haben. Für die Untersuchung der Funktion und Struktur von größeren RNA-Molekülen, wie zum Beispiel ROSE-Elementen, wurde eine Strategie zu deren Herstellung mit Hilfe der T4 RNA Ligase I entwickelt und ex-perimentell bestätigt. Dazu wurde das ROSE-Element in drei Segmente geteilt, diese chemisch synthetisiert, gereinigt und mit Hilfe der T4 RNA Ligase I zum vollständigen Element ligiert. Dabei konnte das ROSE-Element erfolgreich vom 5´-Terminus aufgebaut werden. Es steht nun eine Methode zur Verfügung, um auch modifizierte Oligonukleotide zu einem ROSE-Element zu ligieren und dieses auf seine Funktion und Struktur hin zu untersuchen. Eine RNA 4-way-junction wurde durch Hybridisierung generiert und für strukturelle Untersuchungen verfügbar gemacht.
β-chirale Amine, wie zum Beispiel Pregabalin und Baclofen, sind Verbindungen von großem Interesse insbesondere für die pharmazeutische Industrie. Biokatalytische Herstellungsverfahren, vor allem Aminierungsreaktionen, sind bisher nur geringfügig untersucht worden und werden nach aktuellem Wissenstand bis auf die Synthese von Niraparib noch nicht in großtechnischem Maßstab eingesetzt. Wünschenswert ist die Etablierung einer Synthese, welche (S)-Pregabalin bzw. (R)-Baclofen in hohen Ausbeuten liefert, da diese beiden Enantiomere jeweils die höhere biologische Wirksamkeit aufweisen.
Ziel dieser Arbeit war die Synthese von Pregabalin und Baclofen als Modellverbindungen für β-chirale Amine mit Hilfe einer selektiven Amintransaminase oder Amindehydrogenase.
Zunächst wurde erfolgreich mit Hilfe der Gaschromatographie bzw. HPLC jeweils eine chirale Analytik für die beiden Reaktionsprodukte sowie die Baclofen-Derivate etabliert, die stabil reproduzierbar und auch zur Quantifizierung geeignet war. Auch für 3-(4-Chlorphenyl)-4-oxo-buttersäure-t-butylester konnte eine GC-Methode entwickelt werden, die Aufschluss über die Konzentration und den Enantiomerenüberschuss gab.
Die vier zur Verfügung gestellten Amindehydrogenasen konnten erfolgreich exprimiert und mittels IMAC-Methode gereinigt werden. Trotz geringer Aktivitäten in einem photometrischen NADH-Assay konnte jedoch keine Produktbildung nachgewiesen werden. Eine Kollektion von ca. 150 Amintransaminasen wurde bezüglich der Desaminierung von Pregabalin und Baclofen mittels Dünnschichtchromatographie untersucht. In Richtung der Aminierung wurde ein photometrischer Acetophenon-Assay verwendet. Dabei wurden für Pregabalin sechs und für Baclofen 17 potenzielle Kandidaten ermittelt. Besonders vielversprechend war die Variante 3FCR 59W 87L 231A 382M 429A (3FCR_5M), welche 3-(4-Chlorphenyl)-4-oxo-buttersäure-t-butylester als Substrat akzeptierte. Nach der Ermittlung eines geeigneten Aminodonors und Optimierung der Reaktionsbedingungen konnten Umsätze bis zu 90% bei 99%ee (R) mit IMAC-gereinigter 3FCR_5M erzielt werden.
Um Kosten für ein späteres großtechnisches Verfahren einzusparen, sollte die Reaktion ebenfalls für den Einsatz von Zellextrakt optimiert werden. Dabei wurde beobachtet, dass geringere Enantiomerenüberschüsse erzielt wurden als mit dem gereinigten Enzym und der Substratverbrauch höher als die Produktbildung war. Als mögliche Ursachen wurden der Umsatz des Substrats durch ein E. coli eigenes Enzym, beispielsweise eine Aldehydreduktase oder Aldehyddehydrogenase, sowie eine Beeinflussung der Enantioselektivität durch die veränderte chemische Umgebung oder den selektiven Entzug des gewünschten Substrat-Enantiomers durch eine selektive Nebenreaktion hypothetisiert. Dieses Phänomen konnte durch eine vorgeschaltete Reinigung mittels fraktionierender Ammoniumsulfat-Fällung jedoch erfolgreich umgangen werden. Mit dieser Methode konnten vergleichbar hohe Umsätze und Enantiomerenüberschüsse wie mit dem IMAC-gereinigten Enzym erreicht werden.
Bei ersten Vorversuchen zum Up-Scaling der Reaktion wurde festgestellt, dass eine höhere Substratkonzentration nicht einen proportional höheren Umsatz zur Folge hatte, jedoch konnte der Umsatz durch eine versetzte Zugabe der Enzymlösung gesteigert werden, sodass ein Prozess mit diesem Biokatalysator in seiner aktuellen Form eine kontinuierliche Zugabe erfordern würde. Praktikabel wäre einer Verminderung der Substrat-Inhibierung und Erhöhung der Enzymstabilität durch weiteres Protein-Engineering. Auch zur Produktion von 3FCR_5M im größeren Maßstab wurden Experimente vorgenommen. Dabei konnte gezeigt werden, dass eine vielversprechende Expression im Bioreaktor bei einer kontinuierlichen Temperatur von 30°C und einer Expressionsdauer von sieben Stunden. Nach einigen Optimierungsschritten konnte im Bioreaktor die zwanzigfache volumetrische Aktivität im Vergleich zur Expression im Schüttelkolben erzeugt werden.
Zusammenfassend ist zu sagen, dass in der vorliegenden Arbeit, trotz weiterem Optimierungsbedarf, eine sehr gute Grundlage für die Transaminase-vermittelte Synthese von (R)-Baclofen geschaffen wurde. In zukünftigen Arbeiten sollte die Optimierung der Reaktion in großem Maßstab im Fokus stehen.
Boronate esters, formed by the reaction of an oligonucleotide bearing a 5′-boronic acid moiety with the 3′-terminal cis-diol of another oligonucleotide, support the assembly of functional nucleic acid architectures. Reversible formation of boronate esters occurs in templated fashion and has been shown to restore the activity of split DNA and RNA enzymes as well as a split fluorescent light-up aptamer. Apart from their suitability for the design and application of split nucleic acid enzymes and aptamers in the field of biosensing, boronate esters may have played an important role in early life as surrogates of the natural phosphodiester bond. Their formation is reversible and thus fulfills an important requirement for biological self-assembly. Here we discuss the general concept of stimuli-dependent boronate formation and its application in biomolecules with implications for future research.
Das Interesse an Amin-Transaminasen stieg in den letzten Jahren stark an. Hierbei wurde der Fokus vor allem auf die Aufklärung der Strukturen der Amin-Transaminasen, aber auch auf ihre Anwendung in der Synthese von immer komplexeren Aminen gelegt. In dieser Arbeit befasste ich mich mit der Strukturaufklärung der (R)-selektiven Amin-Transaminase aus Aspergillus fumigatus und mit der Synthese von diastereomerenreinen 1 Amino-3-Methylcyclohexan. Es gelang die (R)-selektive Amin-Transaminase aus Aspergillus fumigatus zu kristallisieren und ihre Struktur mit einer Auflösung von 1,27 Å zu lösen. Der bis dato postulierte Aufbau des aktiven Zentrums von (R)-selektiven ATAs wurde bestätigt. Weiterhin wurde die duale Substraterkennung dieser (R)-ATA untersucht. Dieses erfolgte durch das Soaken mit dem Inhibitor Gabaculin und durch Mutagenesestudien. Hierbei wurde das Arginin 126 identifiziert, welches zusammen mit einem Histidin und einem Tyrosin, für die Koordinierung der Carboxylgruppe von Alanin bzw. Pyruvat in der großen Bindungstasche des aktiven Zentrums verantwortlich ist. Durch diese Erkenntnisse konnte das Verständnis über (R)-selektive Amin-Transaminasen erweitert werden und bietet nun eine gute Grundlage für zukünftige Optimierungen und Anwendungen dieser Enzyme in der Herstellung von Aminen. Zur Synthese von diastereomerenreinem 1-Amino-3-Methylcyclohexan wurde die (S)-selektive Amin-Transaminase aus Vibrio fluvialis (VibFlu) verwendet. Während hohe Enantioselektivitäten für andere Substrate bekannt waren, musste die Amin-Transaminase zunächst mit Hilfe der 3DM-Datenbank für die selektive Transaminierung von 3-Methylcyclohexanon optimiert werden. Eine Kopplung der generierten Mutanten VibFlu Leu56Ile und VibFlu Leu56Val mit verschiedenen Enoatreduktasen führte zur erfolgreichen Synthese von drei der möglichen vier Diastereomeren mit hohen Reinheiten von bis zu 97 %de und guten Umsätzen bis zu 99 %. Somit konnte die erfolgreiche selektive Synthese eines zyklischen Amins mit mehr als einem Stereozentrum durch eine Enzymkaskade gezeigt werden. Dies demonstriert die Möglichkeiten von Kaskadenreaktionen mit Amin-Transaminasen und Enoatreduktasen zur Synthese von komplexen diastereomerenreinen Aminen.
Einige Oberflächenstrukturen, die sogenannten aktiven Zentren, sind Katalysatoren für heterogene Reaktionen. Ihre Beständigkeit ist von Art und Zusammensetzung der Phasengrenze abhängig. Eine Wechselwirkung mit reaktiven Molekülen ändert die Oberfläche durch Auflösung, Adsorption oder Oberflächendiffusion. In dieser Arbeit werden die Änderungen der Oberflächenaktivität und –struktur von Gold und Platin nach der Behandlung mit den Hydroxyl-Radikalen aufgezeigt.
Die elektrochemische Aktivität von Platin gegenüber Hydrochinon, K3Fe(CN)6 und [Ru(NH3)6]Cl2 wurde durch die Behandlung mit Hydroxyl-Radikalen nicht beeinflusst. Die Oberfläche wurde allerdings, durch die Bildung einer Oxidschicht, rauer. Die Oxidschichtbildung konnte zyklovoltammetrisch und potentiometrisch nachgewiesen werden. Im Verlauf der Wechselwirkung von H2O2 mit Platin ging Platin in Lösung (ICP-AES).
Bei Gold wurden im letzten Jahrzehnt Oberflächenstrukturen mit vielfach erhöhter Aktivität nachgewiesen. Die Experimente zeigten, dass Hydroxyl-Radikale die reaktiven Goldstrukturen (aktiven Zentren) selektiv beeinflussen. Die elektrokatalytische Sauerstoffreduktionsreaktion und die defektorientierte Platinabscheidung wurden durch die vorherige Behandlung mit Hydroxyl-Radikalen inaktiver. Der Keimbildungsmechanismus blieb hingegen unverändert (instantaneous). Dies wurde mit Hilfe der Zyklovoltammetrie und der Chronoamperometrie nachgewiesen. Topographische Experimente mit dem Rasterkraftmikroskop (AFM) zeigten ein Platinwachstum auf den oberen Teilen der polykristallinen polierten Goldelektrode. Verschiedene Politurmethoden (fein und grob) wiesen zudem eine komplett unterschiedliche Aktivität und Reproduzierbarkeit auf. Mit einer groben Politur konnte eine deutlich bessere Reproduzierbarkeit erreicht werden.
Die Identifizierung chemisch aktiver Zentren ist sehr reizvoll. Mit Hilfe von AFM Experimenten konnte die Auflösung von Gold direkt verfolgt werden und damit die aktiven Zentren charakterisiert werden. Morphologische Untersuchungen mit dem Rasterkraftmikroskop belegen eine selektive Änderung der Kristallite und Korngrenzen nach der Wechselwirkung einer ausgeheilten Goldoberfläche mit Hydroxyl-Radikalen (in- und ex-situ). Es kann angenommen werden, dass die selektive Oberflächenänderung bei Gold durch die inhomogene Verteilung der Elektronendichte und verschiedene Bindungszustände der Oberflächengoldatome beeinflusst ist. Herausstehende Kristallstrukturen sind nach der Wechselwirkung mit den Hydroxyl-Radikalen kleiner und die Korngrenzen zwischen den Goldkristallen tiefer. Die nach der einmaligen elektrochemischen Zyklisierung auftretenden Oberflächenänderungen sind den Änderungen nach Behandlung mit Hydroxyl-Radikalen ähnlich. Ein mehrmaliges Zyklisieren führt hingegen zu ein er deutlich veränderten Oberflächenstruktur.
Increasing antibacterial drug resistance threatens global health, unfortunately, however, efforts to find novel antibacterial agents have been scaled back by the pharmaceutical industry due to concerns about a poor return on investment. Nevertheless, there is an urgent need to find novel antibacterial compounds to combat antibacterial drug resistance. The synthesis of novel drugs from natural sources is mostly cost-intensive due to those drugs’ complicated structures. Therefore, it is necessary to find novel antibacterials by simple synthesis to become more attractive for industrial production. We succeeded in the discovery of four antibacterial compound (sub)classes accessible in a simple one-pot reaction based on fluorinated benzothiophene-indole hybrids. They have been evaluated against various S. aureus and MRSA strains. Structure- and substituent-dependent activities have been found within the (sub)classes and promising lead compounds have been identified. In addition, bacterial pyruvate kinase was found to be the molecular target of the active compounds. In conclusion, simple one-pot synthesis of benzothiophene-indoles represents a promising strategy for the search of novel antimicrobial compounds.
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.
Introduction
Respiratory tract infections are a worldwide health problem for humans and animals. Different cell types produce lipid mediators in response to infections, which consist of eicosanoids like hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acids (HETEs) or oxylipins like hydroxydocosahexaenoic acids (HDHAs). Both substance classes possess immunomodulatory functions. However, little is known about their role in respiratory infections.
Objectives
Here, we aimed to analyze the lipid mediator imprint of different organs of C57BL/6J mice after intranasal mono-infections with Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus), Staphylococcus aureus or Influenza A virus (IAV) as wells as pneumococcal-IAV co-infection.
Methods
C57BL/6J mice were infected with different pathogens and lungs, spleen, and plasma were collected. Lipid mediators were analyzed using HPLC-MS/MS. In addition, spatial-distribution of sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) and ceramide 1-phosphates (C1P) in tissue samples was examined using MALDI-MS-Imaging. The presence of bacterial pathogens in the lung was confirmed via immunofluorescence staining.
Results
We found IAV specific changes for different HDHAs and HETEs in mouse lungs as well as enhanced levels of 20-HETE in severe S. aureus infection. Moreover, MALDI-MS-Imaging analysis showed an accumulation of C1P and a decrease of S1P during co-infection in lung and spleen. Long chain C1P was enriched in the red and not in the white pulp of the spleen.
Conclusions
Lipid mediator analysis showed that host synthesis of bioactive lipids is in part specific for a certain pathogen, in particular for IAV infection. Furthermore, MS-Imaging displayed great potential to study infections and revealed changes of S1P and C1P in lungs and spleen of co-infected animals, which was not described before.
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.
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 potential of several ion-sensitive electrodes responds to the incorporated cations and anions. This has led some authors to misinterpret the potential of metal salt membrane electrodes and of electrodes of the second kind. Neglecting the kinetics of potential establishment and interpreting the potentials solely based on thermodynamics produce completely irrelevant data and suggest that ion concentrations down to 10−45 mol L−1 are accessible by simple potentiometric measurements. The switching from cation to anion response mechanism cannot be derived from thermodynamic equations. It bears complete similarity to the switching of response in the case of foreign interfering ions.
This text is designed to give the reader a helping hand in writing a scientific paper. It provides generic advice on ways that a scientific paper can be improved. The focus is on the following ethical and non-technical issues: (1) when to start writing, and in what language; (2) how to choose a good title; (3) what should be included in the various sections (abstract, introduction, experimental, results, discussion, conclusions, and supporting information (supplementary material); (4) who should be considered as a co-author, and who should be acknowledged for help; (5) which journal should be chosen; and (6) how to respond to reviewers’ comments. Purely technical issues, such as grammar, artwork, reference styles, etc., are not considered.
In teaching electrochemistry, it is of primary importance to make students always aware of the relations between electrochemistry and all the non-electrochemical topics, which are taught. The vast majority of students will not specialise in electrochemistry, but they all can very much benefit from the basics and concepts of electrochemistry. This paper is aimed to give suggestions how the teaching of electrochemistry can easily be interrelated to topics of inorganic, organic, analytical, environmental chemistry, biochemistry and biotechnology.
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.
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.
Molybdopterin spielt in der Natur eine wesentliche Rolle, da es gebunden an Molybdän den Molybdän-Cofaktor bildet, der einer Reihe verschiedener Enzyme als katalytisches Zentrum dient. Der Molybdän-Cofaktor kann zwar aus dem Protein freigesetzt werden, erweist sich dann aber als instabil. Trotz langjähriger Bemühungen konnten der Molybdän-Cofaktor und seine biologischen Vorstufen bisher nicht auf chemischem Wege synthetisiert werden. Daher konnten die bisher gewonnenen Kenntnisse über diese Verbindung nicht anhand von Untersuchungen an dem freien Cofaktor gewonnen werden. Um den Cofaktor in seiner Chemie zu verstehen, beschäftigt sich diese Arbeit mit der chemischen Synthese von Modellverbindungen, die die Aufgaben des natürlichen Cofaktors nachbilden können. Um den Einfluss der verschiedenen Struktureinheiten auf die Stabilität oder die katalytische Aktivität zu verstehen und so ein tieferes Verständnis über Molybdopterin und mögliche Struktur-/Funktionsbeziehungen des natürlichen Cofaktors zu entwickeln, werden einzelne Strukturabschnitte untersucht. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit war der Fokus das Verständnis der Chemie des Pyrazin-Pyran-Dithiolen-Strukturabschnittes und nach Möglichkeit die Entwicklung alternativer Modellverbindungen, die in der Lage sind Sauerstoff-Transport-Reaktionen zu katalysieren und/oder mit dem Apoenzym verbunden werden können. Im besten Falle kann so eine Modellverbindung als Behandlungsmöglichkeit der Molybdän-Cofaktor-Defizienz eingesetzt werden, bei Bindung mit dem Apoenzym für iSOD (isolierte Sulfitoxidase-Defizienz) oder bei Nichtbindung für MoCo-Defizienz Typ B. Für die Synthese der Pyrazin-Pyran-Dithiolen-Liganden sollten bereits literaturbekannte Syntheserouten insbesondere von Garner modifiziert und optimiert werden. Vergleichsweise sollten auch Ligandensysteme mit einer CH2-Gruppe anstelle der Sauerstofffunktion des Pyrans synthetisiert werden. Des Weiteren sollten neue Synthesewege zu strukturell und elektronisch ähnlichen Verbindungen entwickelt werden. Die so gewonnenen Ligandensysteme sollten anschließend mit vorzugsweise Molybdän, aber auch Wolfram komplexiert werden.
Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenases (BVMOs) are important flavin-dependent enzymes which perform oxygen insertion reactions leading to valuable products. As reported in many studies, BVMOs are usually unstable during application, preventing a wider usage in biocatalysis. Here, we discovered a novel NADPH-dependent BVMO which originates from Halopolyspora algeriensis using sequence similarity networks (SSNs). The enzyme is stable at temperatures between 10 °C to 30 °C up to five days after the purification, and yields the normal ester product. In this study, the substrate scope was investigated for a broad range of aliphatic ketones and the enzyme was biochemically characterized to identify optimum reaction conditions. The best substrate (86 % conversion) was 2-dodecanone using purified enzyme. This novel BVMO could potentially be applied as part of an enzymatic cascade or in bioprocesses which utilize aliphatic alkanes as feedstock.
Introduction
Neurofilament light (NfL) can be detected in blood of healthy individuals and at elevated levels in those with different neurological diseases. We investigated if the choice of biological matrix can affect results when using NfL as biomarker in epidemiological studies.
Method
We obtained paired serum and EDTA-plasma samples of 299 individuals aged 37–67 years (BiDirect study) and serum samples of 373 individuals aged 65–83 years (MEMO study). In BiDirect, Passing–Bablok analyses were performed to assess proportional and systematic differences between biological matrices. Associations between serum or EDTA-plasma NfL and renal function (serum creatinine, serum cystatin C, glomerular filtration rate, and kidney disease) were investigated using linear or logistic regression, respectively. All regression coefficients were estimated (1) per one ng/L increase and (2) per one standard deviation increase (standardization using z-scores). In MEMO, regression coefficients were estimated (1) per one ng/L increase of serum or calculated EDTA-plasma NfL and (2) per one standard deviation increase providing a comparison to the results from BiDirect.
Results
We found proportional and systematic differences between paired NfL measurements in BiDirect, i.e., serum NfL [ng/L] = −0.33 [ng/L] + 1.11 × EDTA-plasma NfL [ng/L]. Linear regression coefficients for the associations between NfL and renal function did not vary between the different NfL measurements. In MEMO, one standard deviation increase in serum NfL was associated with greater changes in the outcomes than in BiDirect.
Conclusion
Although there are differences between serum and EDTA-plasma NfL, results can be used interchangeably if standardized values are used.
Es wurden vier Nukleosid-Analoga hergestellt, deren Anwendungsbereiche gänzlich unterschiedlicher Natur sind. Sie stellen wichtige Hilfsmittel zur Erweiterung der Eigenschaften und zur Charakterisierung von Nukleinsäuren dar. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden die Voraussetzungen für die Selektion eines Cytidindesaminase-Ribozyms geschaffen. Es wurde ein Assay für die in-vitro-Selektion vorgestellt und das zu diesem Zweck notwendige Schlüsselmolekül, ein Cytidin-Derivat, designt und mit einer Gesamtausbeute von 8 % synthetisiert. Das Nukleosid wurde in einer 16-stufigen Synthese mit zwei unterschiedlichen Linkereinheiten funktionalisiert und stellt ein effektives Werkzeug zur Selektion von Cytidindesaminase-Ribozymen dar. Das bifunktionalisierte Cytidin-Substrat wurde über seine 5’-OH Gruppe mit einem Hexaethylenglykol-Linker versehen, der eine primäre Aminogruppe aufwies. Über eine kurze Linkereinheit an der C4-Position der Nukleobase wurde ein Biotinrest angefügt. Die angestrebte Selektionsstrategie sieht die Oxidation des 3’-Endes einer RNA-Bibliothek mittels Natriumperiodat vor. Das resultierende Dialdehyd soll anschließend mit der primären Aminogruppe des Cytidin-Derivats umgesetzt werden. Ein Protokoll zur Anbindung des synthetisierten Cytidins an eine an ihrem 3’-Terminus oxidierte RNA wurde entwickelt und steht für die zukünftige Selektion zur Verfügung. Der Nachweis des Konjugats aus RNA und dem Cytidin-Derivat erfolgte mittels HPLC, sowie massenspektrometrisch. Die RNA-Bibliothek zur Selektion eines Cytidindesaminase-Ribozyms wurde ausgehend von zwei Klenow-Primern hergestellt und steht ebenfalls bereit. Parallel zu den Arbeiten der Synthese des Cytidins, wurden im Rahmen zweier Kooperationen drei weitere Nukleosid-Analoga dargestellt. Das erste Kooperationsprojekt sah die Herstellung einer kurzen RNA vor. Es handelte sich dabei um die hochmodifizierte Anticodonschleife der tRNA(Lys) aus E. coli. Zur chemischen Festphasensynthese dieser 17mer RNA waren die Phosphoramiditbausteine von N6-Threonylcarbamoyladenosin (t6A) und 2-Thiouridin (s2U) erforderlich. Die Synthesen der Nukleosid-Analoga t6A und s2U, sowie deren Umwandlungen in die jeweiligen Phosphoramidite wurden vorgestellt. Die Darstellung von s2U erfolgte nach Protokollen von Vorbrüggen und Strehlke mit einer Gesamtausbeute von 78 %.Während des Schutzes der 2’-OH Gruppe mit TBDMS, bildete sich hauptsächlich das 3’-O-TBDMS-Isomer, das sich nur sehr schwer vom 2’-O-TBDMS-Isomer separieren ließ. Durch Verwendung der Schutzgruppe Di-tert-butylsilandiylditriflat zur Synthese des s2U-Phosphoramidits konnte das Problem der Bildung des 3’-O-TBDMS-Isomers behoben werden. Die erste Synthese eines t6A-Derivats orientierte sich an Vorschriften von Davis et al. und lieferte das Produkt mit einer Gesamtausbeute von 25 % über 7 Schritte. Darüber hinaus wurde eine zweite Synthesestrategie entworfen, die auf der Verwendung eines Isocyanats von L-Threonin basierte. Die Aminosäure Threonin wurde mit zwei verschiedenen Silylschutzgruppen versehen, die beide kompatibel mit der Phosphoramiditchemie während der chemischen RNA-Synthese waren. Das Isocyanat wurde mit guten Ausbeuten dargestellt und anschließend sowohl mit ungeschütztem, als auch mit geschütztem Adenosin zur Reaktion gebracht. In beiden Fällen wurde ein t6A-Derivat erhalten. Die Umsetzung mit einem geschützten Adenosin lieferte das t6A-Derivat mit einer Gesamtausbeute von 20% über 8 Stufen. Es wurde somit eine – in Bezug auf Ausbeute und Arbeitsaufwand – gleichwertige Alternativsynthese zur Darstellung von t6A-Derivaten entwickelt. Aus den beiden modifizierten Nukleosiden s2U und t6A wurden die Phosphoramidit-Bausteine generiert. Durch den erfolgreichen Einbau beider Nukleoside in eine 17mer RNA konnte die Anticodon-Schleife der tRNALys hergestellt werden. Die Bearbeitung des zweiten Kooperationsthemas erforderte die Herstellung eines isotopenmarkierten Pseudouridins. Es wurde eine vergleichende Synthese von 15N- markiertem Pseudouridin durch Adaption zweier unterschiedlicher Protokolle durchgeführt. Die erste Strategie, eine 7-stufige Synthese, lieferte die Zielverbindung mit einer Ausbeute von 2% über alle Schritte ausgehend von D-Ribose. Bezogen auf den 15N-Harnstoff betrug die Gesamtausbeute 14 %. Grund für die geringe Gesamtausbeute war eine unvermeidliche Isomerisierung der beta-Form der D-Ribose zum nicht reagierenden alpha-Anomer während der Lacton-Bildung, sowie der geringe Umsatz während der Reaktion mit dem 15N-angereicherten Harnstoff. Die zweite Strategie gab das 15N-markierte Pseudouridin mit einer Gesamtausbeute von 9 % über 9 Schritte. Für die Synthese von Uracil wurde eine alternative Vorschrift verwendet, bei der Propinsäure mit Harnstoff umgesetzt wurde. Darüber hinaus wurde festgestellt, dass auf karzinogene Lösungsmittel, sowie anderer Reagenzien ohne Ausbeuteverluste verzichtet werden konnte.
Purpose: The cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) inhibitor p27Kip1 may be involved in regulating re-entry of residual hepatocytes into the cell cycle upon loss of liver tissue by partial hepatectomy (PH). As yet, changes in Kip1 expression during the initial period following PH are not well-characterized. We investigated immediate changes in Kip1 mRNA and protein levels as well as changes in Kip1 phosphorylation in liver tissue within the relevant time window between surgery and the onset of DNA synthesis at 10–12 h.
Methods: We used real-time PCR, quantitative Western blotting, and immune histochemistry on tissue samples of adult rats obtained during or between 2 and 10 h after surgical removal of two thirds of the liver to analyze Kip1 mRNA or protein levels, respectively, or to quantify nuclear expression of Kip1.
Results: Kip1 mRNA was down-regulated within 4 h after PH by 60% and remained unchanged thereafter up to 10 h. With a lag phase of 2–3 h, Kip1-protein was down-regulated to a level of 40% of the control. The level of Thr187-phosphorylated Kip1 started to increase at 4 h and reached a maximum level at 8–10 h after PH. Kip1 immunoreactivity was observed in 30% of the hepatocytes before PH. Within 6–8 h after PH, more than half of the hepatocytes lost nuclear Kip1 signals. Kip1-specific micro-RNAs (miRNA221, miRNA222) were not changed upon PH.
Conclusions: A portion of hepatocytes in adult rats constitutively express Kip1 and down-regulate Kip1 immediately upon PH. This response involves transcriptional processes (loss of Kip1 mRNA) as well as accelerated degradation of existing protein (increase in pThr187-phosphorylation mediating polyubiquitinylation and proteasomal degradation of Kip1). Kip1 down-regulation occurs precisely within the intervall between surgery and onset of DNA synthesis which supports the hypothesis that it mediates activation of G0/0S-phase Cdk/cyclin-complexes and re-entry of hepatocytes into the cell cycle.
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.
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.
Die Hälfte der globalen Primarproduktion wird in den Ozeanen realisiert und dabei wird ein großer Anteil des fixierten CO2 genutzt, um Algenpolysaccharide zu synthetisieren. Diese Kohlenhydrate dienen als wichtige Kohlenstoff- und Energiequelle für marine Nahrungsnetze, wobei sie von kohlenhydrataktiven Enzymen zu monomeren Zuckern umgesetzt werden. Da bisher wenig über den enzymatischen Abbau von Algenpolysacchariden in den Ozeanen bekannt ist, war es das Ziel dieser Arbeit, zu einem tieferen Verständnis dieser Prozesse beizutragen.
O-Methylierungen stellen stabile Modifikationen an Zuckern in marinen und terrestrischen Polysacchariden dar. Es wurde in Artikel I gezeigt, dass Cytochrom P450 Monooxygenasen eine wichtige Funktion in enzymatischen Abbausystemen aus marinen Bakterien für Agar haben, wobei diese Enzyme die oxidative Demethylierung von 6-O-Methyl-D-galaktose, einem Monomer aus Rotalgenpolysacchariden, katalysieren. Diese Ergebnisse zeigen, dass es sich bei der P450-Subfamilie CYP236A um die zweite beschriebene Gruppe von kohlenhydrataktiven Monooxygenasen handelt. Die charakterisierten P450s sind hochspezifisch für 6-O-Methyl-D-galaktose und akzeptieren keine typischen P450-Substrate. Um die molekularen Faktoren für den spezifischen Umsatz dieses polaren Substrates aufzuklären, wurde Proteinkristallografie genutzt (Artikel II). Die Kristallstruktur der P450 Monooxygenase aus Z. galactanivorans mit gebundenem Substratmolekül zeigt, dass sowohl Wasserstoffbrückenbindungen als auch hydrophobe Interaktionen an der Substraterkennung beteiligt sind, was zusätzlich durch ITC sowie Mutationsstudien bestätigt wurde.
Schnellwachsende Grünalgen der Gattung Ulva führen weltweit zu gefährlichen Algenblüten. Ein Hauptbestandteil der gebildeten Biomasse stellt das anionische Polysaccharid Ulvan dar. Bisher war der enzymatische Ulvanabbau kaum verstanden, was die sinnvolle Nutzung von Ulva-Biomasse erschwerte. Die detaillierte biochemische Charakterisierung einer Ulvanlyase auf F. agariphila wird in Artikel III gezeigt. Dieses Enzym katalysiert den ersten Schritt im Ulvanabbau und die biochemischen Parameter stimmen mit den Umweltbedingungen in Küstenbereichen des gemäßigten Ozeans überein, dem Habitat, aus dem dieses Bakterium isoliert wurde. Alle nachfolgenden Schritte im kompletten enzymatischen Ulvanabbau wurden aufgeklärt und sind in Artikel IV zum ersten Mal beschrieben. Insgesamt 13 Enzyme aus den Klassen der Polysaccharidlyasen, Glykosidhydrolasen sowie Sulfatasen agieren in einer komplexen Kaskade zusammen, um schlussendlich monomere Zucker aus Ulvan bereitzustellen.
Die gezeigten Identifizierungen und Charakterisierungen von neuen kohlenhydrataktiven Enzymen tragen nicht nur zu einem besseren Verständnis der Vorgänge im marinen Kohlenstoffkreislauf bei, sondern bilden zudem die Grundlage für zukünftige biotechnologische Prozesse. Eine effiziente enzymatische Depolymerisation der Algenpolysaccharide ist nötig, um Bioraffineriekonzepte basierend auf Algenkohlenhydraten zu realisieren. Dabei können über mikrobielle Fermentation Biokraftstoffe der zweiten Generation oder andere nützliche Produkte hergestellt werden.
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.
Abstract
Aim
To examine the associations between bone turnover markers and periodontitis in two cross‐sectional population‐based studies.
Materials and Methods
We used data from two independent adult samples (N = 4993), collected within the Study of Health in Pomerania project, to analyse cross‐sectional associations of N‐procollagen type 1 amino‐terminal propeptide (P1NP), C‐terminal cross‐linking telopeptide, osteocalcin, bone‐specific alkaline phosphatase (BAP), fibroblast growth factor 23, wingless‐type mouse mammary tumour virus integration site family member 5a (WNT5A), and sclerostin values with periodontitis. Confounder‐adjusted gamma and fractional response regression models were applied.
Results
Positive associations were found for P1NP with mean pocket probing depth (PPD; eβ=1.008; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.001–1.015), mean clinical attachment loss (mean CAL; eβ=1.027; 95% CI: 1.011–1.044), and proportion of sites with bleeding on probing (%BOP; eβ=1.055; 95% CI: 1.005–1.109). Similar associations were seen for BAP with %BOP (eβ=1.121; 95% CI: 1.042–1.205), proportion of sites with PPD ≥4 mm (%PPD4) (eβ=1.080; 95% CI: 1.005–1.161), and sclerostin with %BOP (eβ=1.308; 95% CI: 1.005–1.704). WNT5A was inversely associated with mean PPD (eβ=0.956; 95% CI: 0.920–0.993) and %PPD4 (eβ=0.794; 95% CI: 0.642–0.982).
Conclusions
This study revealed scattered associations of P1NP, BAP, WNT5A, and sclerostin with periodontitis, but the results are contradictory in the overall context. Associations reported in previous studies could not be confirmed.
Scholz et al. developed an electrochemical assay to study the impact of reactive species on self-assembled monolayer (SAM). The aim of this thesis is to use this electrochemical assay with gold supported lipid bilayers instead of SAM to study the effect of reactive species on model membranes that mimic oxidative damage to the biological cell membrane. Here, three questions will be addressed: I) how specific substances such as lipophilic and hydrophilic antioxidants protect a membrane from oxidative damage, II) what are the lipid oxidation products after oxidative damage of the model membrane, and III) whether oxidative damage of the model membranes causes pore formation on lipid bilayer. Electrochemistry was first used to measure the oxidative damage over the entire lipid membrane. Then, mass spectroscopy was used to characterize how lipids as the molecular building blocks of the membrane, change when exposed to reactive species. Imaging the membrane with AFM showed how oxidative damage in the model membrane alters lipid self-assembly within the supported lipid bilayer in nanometer scale. In addition, cold physical plasma (CPP) was used to produce the biological relevant reactive species. This fundamental research demonstrates the great potential of supported lipid bilayers as model membranes and cold physical plasma as a source for the production of biologically relevant reactive species to study the effect of oxidative stress on cell membranes.
Throughout the previous ten years many scientists took inspiration from natural molybdenum and tungsten-dependent oxidoreductases to build functional active site analogues. These studies not only led to an ever more detailed mechanistic understanding of the biological template, but also paved the way to atypical selectivity and activity, such as catalytic hydrogen evolution. This review is aimed at representing the last decade’s progress in the research of and with molybdenum and tungsten functional model compounds. The portrayed systems, organized according to their ability to facilitate typical and artificial enzyme reactions, comprise complexes with non-innocent dithiolene ligands, resembling molybdopterin, as well as entirely non-natural nitrogen, oxygen, and/or sulfur bearing chelating donor ligands. All model compounds receive individual attention, highlighting the specific novelty that each provides for our understanding of the enzymatic mechanisms, such as oxygen atom transfer and proton-coupled electron transfer, or that each presents for exploiting new and useful catalytic capability. Overall, a shift in the application of these model compounds towards uncommon reactions is noted, the latter are comprehensively discussed.
Genetic Regulation of Liver Metabolites and Transcripts Linking to Biochemical-Clinical Parameters
(2019)
Given the central metabolic role of the liver, hepatic metabolites and transcripts reflect the organismal physiological state. Biochemical-clinical plasma biomarkers, hepatic metabolites, transcripts, and single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotypes of some 300 pigs were integrated by weighted correlation networks and genome-wide association analyses. Network-based approaches of transcriptomic and metabolomics data revealed linked of transcripts and metabolites of the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP). This finding was evidenced by using a NADP/NADPH assay and HDAC4 and G6PD transcript quantification with the latter coding for first limiting enzyme of this pathway and by RNAi knockdown experiments of HDAC4. Other transcripts including ARG2 and SLC22A7 showed link to amino acids and biomarkers. The amino acid metabolites were linked with transcripts of immune or acute phase response signaling, whereas the carbohydrate metabolites were highly enrich in cholesterol biosynthesis transcripts. Genome-wide association analyses revealed 180 metabolic quantitative trait loci (mQTL) (p < 10-4). Trans-4-hydroxy-L-proline (p = 6 × 10-9), being strongly correlated with plasma creatinine (CREA), showed strongest association with SNPs on chromosome 6 that had pleiotropic effects on PRODH2 expression as revealed by multivariate analysis. Consideration of shared marker association with biomarkers, metabolites, and transcripts revealed 144 SNPs associated with 44 metabolites and 69 transcripts that are correlated with each other, representing 176 mQTL and expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL). This is the first work to report genetic variants associated with liver metabolite and transcript levels as well as blood biochemical-clinical parameters in a healthy porcine model. The identified associations provide links between variation at the genome, transcriptome, and metabolome level molecules with clinically relevant phenotypes. This approach has the potential to detect novel biomarkers displaying individual variation and promoting predictive biology in medicine and animal breeding.
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.
This thesis deals with the characterisation and engineering of new thermophilic PET hydrolases as potential candidates for an eco-friendly biocatalytic recycling approach for the upcycling or downcycling of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) on industrial scale. Furthermore, high-throughput screening methods are described that detect the products of PET hydrolysis. The high demand of PET in the packaging and textile industries with a global production of 82 million metric tons per year has significantly contributed to the global solid waste stream and environmental plastic pollution after its end-of-life. Although PET hydrolases have been identified in various microorganisms, only a handful of benchmark enzymes have been engineered for industrial applications. Therefore, the identification of new PET hydrolases from metagenomes or via protein engineering approaches, especially thermophilic PET hydrolases with optimal operating temperatures (i.e., increased thermostability and activity) near the glass transition temperature of the polymer PET, is a crucial step towards a bio-based circular plastic economy. Article I demonstrates that metagenome-derived thermophilic PET hydrolases can be significantly improved using different engineering approaches to achieve a similar activity level as the well-established leaf-branch-compost cutinase (LCC) F243I/D238C/S283C/Y127G variant (LCC ICCG). In Article II, thermostable variants of a mesophilic enzyme (PETase from Ideonella sakaiensis) were identified from a mutant library and characterised against PET substrates in various forms. Articles III and IV describe the application of high-throughput methods for the identification of novel PET hydrolases by directly assaying terephthalic acid (TPA), one of the monomeric building blocks of PET. Furthermore, Article IV describes the possibility of a one-pot conversion of the TPA-based aldehydes produced to their diamines as example for an open-loop upcycling method.
Das Hairpin-Ribozym-basierte System CRZ-2 wurde verwendet, um Selbst-Prozessierungsprodukte nach Ribozym-Reaktion zu untersuchen. Inter- und intramolekulare Ribozym-Reaktionen sollten mit CRZ-2 und dem entsprechenden linearen 83mer (l-83mer) durchgeführt und Oligomere und zyklisierte RNAs nachgewiesen werden. Über die Bildung der intermediären Spaltprodukte und des finalen Spaltproduktes konnte der Ablauf der Spalt-Kaskade komplett gezeigt werden. Dies war insbesondere durch vergleichende Verwendung von Test-Systemen im denaturierenden Polyacrylamid-Gel möglich, da eines der Systeme eine eindeutige Separation der Produkte im Gel zulässt. Weiter konnten die zwei erwarteten Spalt-Produkte (83mer und 92mer) über Sequenzierung ihrer komplementären DNAs nachgewiesen werden. Um zwischen zyklischen und linearen Reaktionsprodukten unterscheiden zu können, wurden folgende Methoden herangezogen: i) 2D-PAGE ii) exonukleolytischer Abbau von RNA in Lösung und im Gel, iii) Vergleich des Laufverhaltens eines inaktiven RNA-Monomers mit dem Reaktionsgemisch des l-83mer nach Ligationsreaktion, iv) AFM und v) Ferguson-Plot. Es zeigte sich, dass das CRZ-2 nach Ribozym-Reaktion ausschließlich lineare Produkte und Oligomere bis zum Trimer hervorbringt, während das l-83mer nach Ligationsreaktion auch einen Ring, das zyklische 83mer, hervorbringt. Das Wissen um die Art der Reaktionsprodukte von CRZ-2 und dem l-83mer ermöglichten es, diese beiden RNAs als Referenz-Systeme zu benutzen, um Hairpin-Ribozym-basierte Varianten zu untersuchen. Die bioinformatische Entwicklung neuer Varianten erfolgte in Kooperation mit der Arbeitsgruppe von Prof. Ivo Hofacker (Universität Wien). Dabei wurde ein wahrscheinlichkeitsbasierter Entwurf (probability based design, kurz: PBD) für RNA-Sekundärstrukturen mittels Programm Switch.pl aus dem Vienna RNA package 2.0 verwendet. Die für die katalytische Aktivität der Hairpin-Ribozym-Varianten essentiellen Basenfolgen in den Loops wurden beibehalten. Alle Test-Systeme waren bistabil, denn sie zeigten indirekt, das die für CRZ-2 übliche Spalt-Kaskade durchlaufen wurde, indem das jeweilige zyklische 83mer über 2D-PAGE nachgewiesen wurde. Wie erwartet, waren die Varianten insgesamt aktiver als das Referenzsystem CRZ-2 und sie unterschieden sich, wie bioinformatisch charakterisiert, in ihrem Zirkularisationsverhalten bezüglich der Monomere. Bioinformatisch unerwartet war das Zyklisierungsverhalten der Dimere. Ausschließlich bei Test-System 4 könnten gemäß 2D-PAGE und AFM Analyse unter anderem auch dimere RNA-Ring entstanden sein. PBD4 ist das System, bei welchem die geringste Dimer-Zyklisierungstendenz angenommen wurde. Eine erste Evaluierung der PBD-Methode ergibt somit, dass die Erwartungen für die bioinformatische Charakterisierung des Ablaufs der Spalt-Kaskade bis zur Monomerzyklisierung erfüllt wurden. Für die bioinformatisch nicht vorausgesagten experimentellen Ergebnisse, z.B. bei der Dimerzyklisierung, könnten verstärkt tertiäre Interaktionen relevant sein, die mit der PBD-Methode zur Sekundärstrukturvorhersage nicht berücksichtigt werden. Sequenz-Alignments der Test-Systeme zu CRZ-2 ließen Rückschlüsse auf die Funktionen einzelner Basen zu. Vier Basen traten zusätzlich zu den vorgegebenen Sequenzen auf. Diese befinden sich in einer Helix und könnten kritisch für das Zustandekommen dieser Helix als wichtiges Strukturelement im bistabilen Ribozym sein. Dieser Aspekt könnte in weiterführenden Arbeiten mit rationalem Design z.B. über Einfach- oder Doppelmutation weiter untersucht und die Auswirkungen auf die Selbst-Prozessierungsereignisse analysiert werden. Interessant sind auch die eingeführten Mutationen im superstabilen Tetraloop der Hairpin-Ribozym-Varianten. Im Sequenz-Alignment zeigte sich, dass sich PBD3 und 4 nur um zwei sich im Tetraloop befindlichen Basen unterscheiden (Positionen 1 und 3). Da sich die beiden Systeme bezüglich ihrer Oligomerisierungs- und Zyklisierungstendenz unterscheiden, sind diese beiden Positionen für die Funktionen essentiell.
Disregarded Measurement Uncertainty Contributions and Their Magnitude in Measuring Plasma Glucose
(2020)
Background:
Each measurement is subject to measurement uncertainty (MU). Consequently, each measurement of plasma glucose concentration used for diagnosis and monitoring of diabetes mellitus (DM) is affected. Although concepts and methods of MU are well established in many fields of science and technology, they are presently only incompletely implemented by medical laboratories, neglecting MU of target values of internal quality control (IQC) materials.
Methods:
An empirical and practical approach for the estimation of MU based on the analysis of routine IQC using control samples with assigned target values is presented. Its feasibility is demonstrated exemplarily by analyzing IQC data from one year obtained for glucose employing the hexokinase method with IQC of two different concentrations.
Results:
Combined relative extended (k = 2) MU comprising bias, coefficient of variation (CV), and MU of the target values assigned to control materials were about 9% with a lower (~ 56 mg/dL; ~3.1 mmol/L) and 8% with a higher (~ 346 mg/dL; ~19.2 mmol/L) concentration sample, analyzing IQC of one year from three different devices.
Conclusions:
Estimation of MU in this study is quite reliable due to the large number of IQC data from one year. The MU of the target values of the commercial control material in this study was considerably larger than other MU contributions, ie, standard deviation and bias. In the future, the contribution of MU of commercial IQC should be addressed more carefully and technologies to measure glucose should be geared toward smaller MU possible, as needed, especially for glucose concentration measurements in diagnosis and management of DM.
Der gesamte Zellmetabolismus besteht aus einem effektiven System an Enzymkaskaden, um das Leben zu ermöglichen. Hier werden Stoffe ohne Abtrennung oder Aufarbeitung über verschiedene Intermediate selektiv zum Produkt umgesetzt. Die Ersparnis an Zeit, Kosten und Abfall durch den Wegfall von Reinigungen der Zwischenprodukte und der direkte Umsatz von toxischen oder instabilen Intermediaten zum Produkt machen Kaskadenreaktionen zu einem aktuellen und interessanten Anwendungsbereich der Biotechnologie. Im Rahmen dieser Doktorarbeit konnte erfolgreich eine in vivo Enzymkaskade aus drei Oxidoreduktasen etabliert, untersucht und mit Fusionsproteinen verbessert werden. Zur Etablierung der in vivo Enzymkaskade aus Alkoholdehydrogenase, Enoatreduktase und Baeyer-Villiger-Monooxygenase im Rahmen eines DFG-Projekts (Bo1862/6-1) in Zusammenarbeit mit der Technischen Universität Wien wurde zunächst nach den geeigneten Enzyme gesucht. Mit einer Alkoholdehydrogenase aus Laktobacillus kefir und einer Alkoholdehydrogenase aus Rhodococcus ruber konnte eine Oxidation von chiralen Cyclohexenol-Derivaten und Carveolen zu den entsprechenden prochiralen Ketonen erfolgen. Im Rahmen der Suche nach geeigneten Enzymen für die Kaskade wurde von drei neuen Enoatreduktasen aus Pseudomonas putida ATCC 17453 das Substratspektrum untersucht. Die xenobiotische Reduktase A (XenA), die xenobiotische Reduktase B (XenB) und die N-Ethylmaleimid-Reduktase (NemA) akzeptierten sowohl aliphatische als auch cyclische Ketone und Aldehyde. Sehr gute Umsätze konnten mit Imiden und Carvonen nachgewiesen werden. Besonders die XenA und XenB zeigten mit über 99 % Enantiomerenüberschuss in der Bildung von Dihydrocarvonen exzellente Stereoselektivitäten. In der Enzymkaskade setzten dann die XenB oder das Old yellow enzyme (OYEI) die α,β-ungesättigen Ketone selektiv zu den chiralen Ketonen um. Diese wurde dann von der Cyclohexanon-monooxygenase (CHMO) aus Acinetobacter species in die gewünschten chirale Laktone umgesetzt. Nach erfolgreichen Klonierungen konnten alle vier Enzymkombinationen der Enzymkaskade löslich und aktiv in einem E. coli-Stamm kultiviert werden. Mit der Kombination verschiedener nicht-natürlich verbundener Biokatalysatoren konnten in vivo Cyclohexenol und einfach Methyl-substituierte Cyclohexenol-Derivate selektiv zu chiralen Laktonen umgesetzt werden. Wir konnten durch Auswahlmöglichkeiten zwischen verschiedenen Alkoholdehydrogenasen und Enoat-reduktasen modular agieren und so zum Beispiel innerhalb von 20 Stunden die Reaktion von 4 Methyl-2-cyclohexenol zu 100 % in das optisch reine Lakton in E. coli katalysieren. Auch die für die Polymerindustrie interessanten Dihydrochalconlaktone konnten mit sehr guten Umsätzen und mit über 99 %ee hergestellt werden. Nach der erfolgreichen Etablierung der Enzymkaskade wurde die Umsatzgeschwindigkeit mit Hilfe von Fusionsproteinen noch einmal gesteigert. Dafür wurde die Auswirkung von verschiedenen Linkern und die Abfolge der Enzymdomänen im Fusionsprotein aus XenB-Domäne und CHMO-Domäne untersucht. Mit dem Fusionsproteine CHMO_G_XenB konnte nach einer Stabilisierung der CHMO-Domäne ein sehr guter Biokatalysator hergestellt werden. Anwendungen in der in vivo Enzymkaskade zeigten schnellere Umsätze für Cyclohexenol und Carveol. Ein aktives Fusionsprotein aus Alkoholdehydrogenase, XenB und CHMO konnte nicht etabliert werden, da beide Alkoholdehydrogenasen aus der Enzymkaskade bei der Fusionierung inaktiviert wurden. Auch wenn kein aktives Fusionsprotein aus drei verschiedenen Enzymdomänen hergestellt werden konnte, ist mit der erstmaligen Fusion einer Enoatreduktase und einer Baeyer-Villiger-Monooxygenase die neue in vivo Enzymkaskade verbessert worden. Somit konnte in dieser Doktorarbeit die erfolgreiche Anwendung von einer modularen in vivo Enzymkaskaden für die Herstellung chiraler Laktone für die Polymerchemie gezeigt werden.
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.
Abstract
Erucic (22:1, cisΔ13) and gondoic acids (20:1, cisΔ11) are building blocks obtained from renewable sources for the oleochemical industry. Different biocatalytic strategies for the enrichment of these compounds with high recovery yields were developed in our group. Geotrichum candidum lipases (GCL) strongly discriminate against fatty acids longer than 18 carbon atoms. Thus, GCL‐I and ‐II were investigated using hydrolysis or ethanolysis reactions with Crambe and Camelina oils. Hydrolysis was also studied using fatty acid ethyl esters (FAEE) derived from the corresponding oil. Both isoforms were highly selective; however, interesting differences were observed. Although it has been reported that GCL‐I displays a higher preference toward 18 cisΔ9, which is present in the studied oils at high levels, GCL‐II showed higher enrichment values during hydrolysis independent of the substrate used. Hence, enrichments of 87% (Crambe oil) and 82% (Crambe FAEE) for erucic acid and 50% (Camelina oil) and 45% (Camelina FAEE) for gondoic acid, with recovery values between 89% and 99%, were achieved. On the contrary, the best enzyme for ethanolysis was GCL‐I (82% and 41% for erucic and gondoic acid, respectively). In this case, although GCL‐II also displayed good enrichment and recovery levels (77% and 28%, respectively), they were lower compared to the former reactions. In both ethanolysis reactions, the FAEE fraction contained between 92% and 97% of 18 unsaturated fatty acids.
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.
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.