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In the 1940s cytochrome P450 monooxygenases have been discovered and have been the focus of many studies ever since. Although they catalyze very interesting reactions that might find applications in the production of fine chemicals or pharmaceuticals, their low activity and stability often reduces their economic value. Both properties, the activity and the stability, are influenced by the uncoupling of the catalytic cycle.
In this PhD thesis, an assay for the screening of activity and uncoupling of cytochrome P450 enzymes was successfully developed. After finding optimal conditions for the assay, concerning pH and enzyme concentration, the uncoupling of cytochrome P450 BM3 and five mutants (F87Y, R47L, Y51F, A82L and T268A) was investigated. With the results obtained, a comparison of data from literature was possible and revealed similarities. Additionally, through negative controls, the reliability of the assay could be further demonstrated. Although other methods have been described for the detection of hydrogen peroxide formation, the combination of NADPH consumption measurement and hydrogen peroxide formation in parallel was new and represents a very good basis for a pre-screening of large mutant libraries, followed by closer investigation of selected variants.
For the investigation of the activity of the CYP11A1 system, consisting of CYP11A1 and Adx and AdR as redox partner system, the expression and purification for all three proteins was investigated first. For the protein CYP11A1 and Adx, good expression levels were achieved, whereas for AdR the protein concentration obtained was very low. The purification of all three proteins was partially accomplished but left room for improvement. Therefore, in the Master thesis of Christopher Grimm, the pH and temperature stability of all three proteins was further investigated in order to improve conditions used for ion exchange chromatography and to investigate possible conditions for in vitro biocatalysis. As unfortunately even with further investigation of the expression of AdR, no improvement was achieved, a whole-cell system was further investigated. Here, the product formation could be increased 8-fold in comparison to the published data, from 0.27% conversion to 2.2% conversion over 24 h by using a different detergent for substrate solubilization, which might have led to a better substrate supply to the enzyme.
Due to the low activity and stability, a different P450 system, the CYP17A1 enzyme, was subsequently investigated, first by in vitro biocatalysis with the human CYP17A1 expressed in E. coli. Therefore, a suitable redox partner system needed to be found for efficient electron supply of the enzyme. In in vitro biocatalysis, in combination with the Pdx/PdR system of P. putida the CYP17A1 enzyme showed the highest conversion with 91% after 24 h. To investigate the activity of the enzyme further, all active site residues in 4 Å proximity to the bound substrate were exchanged with alanine. After expression of the variants, almost no correctly folded protein was obtained for the variants. Also, after investigating different buffers to possibly enhance the stability, no improvements were achieved. Therefore, a whole-cell approach with the bovine enzyme was chosen in order to investigate the activity of the alanine variants. Here the importance of positions N202, R239, G297, E305, and T306A, described in literature to be important for catalytic activity, was confirmed. Most importantly, three positions that alter the regioselectivity of the enzyme were identified. The reaction of the V483A mutant was therefore also further investigated by preparative biocatalysis. Afterwards the new product was separated by preparative HPLC and identified as 16α- hydroxyprogesterone as confirmed by NMR spectroscopy analysis.
In the last part of the thesis, another screening approach for possible high-throughput screening was investigated. In contrast to the other screening approach, here the investigation of the substrate conversion and the hydrogen peroxide formation were optimized for application in droplets. After finding that DCFH-DA was not sensitive enough towards hydrogen peroxide, the AmplifluTM Red probe was used. As both fluorescent products were found to stay in the aqueous phase above pH 7.4, the conditions investigated for the AmplifluTM Red assay were applied and only NADPH to substrate ratio was investigated by using an uncoupling variant, an active variant from literature and the cytochrome P450 BM3 wild-type enzyme. After finding a good ratio, the five variants used for the investigation of the AmplifluTM Red assay were investigated in the same concentration later on found in the droplets (1 cell per 4 pL), and one variant showed improved product formation compared to wild-type. This finding clearly shows the applicability of the assay for high-throughput screening in droplets.
G-Quadruplexe (G4) sind alternative Sekundärstrukturen, die von Guanosin-reichen DNA- oder RNA-Sequenzen ausgebildet werden können. In den letzten Jahren rückten diese tetrameren Konstrukte aufgrund ihres erst kürzlichen Nachweises in lebenden Humanzellen und ihrem Vorkommen in bestimmten funktionellen Genombereichen wie den Promotorregionen von Protoonkogenen oder den Telomeren zunehmend in den Fokus der Nukleinsäureforschung. Insbesondere ihre starke Korrelation mit Krebs macht Quadruplexstrukturen als Zielmotiv für die Entwicklung antikanzerogener Wirkstoffe höchst interessant. Um jedoch niedermolekulare Moleküle für therapeutische Zwecke nutzen zu können, muss zunächst auf molekularer Ebene ein grundlegendes Verständnis für die Ligand-Quadruplex-Interaktion geschaffen und anhand dieser Informationen Optimierungsmöglichkeiten für G4-bindende Liganden ergründet werden.
Ziel dieser Dissertation war die ausführliche Analyse der Bindung biologisch aktiver, Phenyl-substituierter Indolochinoline an Quadruplexstrukturen mittels diverser spektroskopischer und kalorimetrischer Methoden. Um simultan den Einfluss verschiedener Ligandstrukturelemente auf die G4-Anbindung für ein zukünftiges, rationales Wirkstoffdesign zu erforschen, wurde im Rahmen dieser Arbeit zunächst unterschiedlich modifizierte Indolochinolinderivate synthetisch hergestellt. In ersten spektroskopischen Experimenten sollten diese Moleküle anschließend nicht nur auf ihre generelle Interaktion mit verschiedenen G4-Topologien hin untersucht, sondern auch die Selektivität, die Bindungsaffinität und der Interaktionsmodus der Liganden ermittelt werden. Besonders die Indolochinoline mit basischen Seitenketten und einer N5-Methylierung zeigten eine hohe Affinität und Präferenz gegenüber parallelen Quadruplexstrukturen. Um detailliertere Informationen über diese Ligand-DNA-Wechselwirkung zu erhalten, erfolgten umfassende thermodynamische Bindungsstudien mittels isothermaler Titrationskalorimetrie. Anhand dieser Daten erfolgte eine Separation der Freien Bindungsenthalpie, die in dieser Form erstmalig für ein G4-bindendes Molekül beschrieben wurde. Hierbei zeigte sich, dass die Anbindung der Phenyl-substituierten Indolochinoline nicht nur durch hydrophobe Effekte, sondern vor allem durch spezifische molekulare Wechselwirkungen zwischen dem Ligand und der Quadruplex vorangetrieben wird.
Amine transaminases are versatile biocatalysts for the production of pharmaceutically and agrochemically relevant chiral amines. They represent an environmentally benign alternative to waste intensive transition metal catalysed synthesis strategies, especially because of their high stereoselectivity and robustness. Therefore, they have been frequently used in the (chemo)enzymatic synthesis of amines and/or became attractive targets for enzyme engineering especially in the last decade, mainly in order to enlarge their substrate scope. Certainly, one of the most notable examples of amine transaminase engineering is the
manufacturing of the anti-diabetic drug Sitagliptin in large scale after several rounds of protein engineering. Thereby, the target amine was produced in asymmetric synthesis mode which is the most convenient and favored route to a target chiral amine, starting from the corresponding ketone. The choice of the amine donor is highly relevant for reaction design in terms of economical and thermodynamic considerations. For instance, the use of alanine as the natural amine donor is one of the most common strategies for the amination of target ketones but needs the involvement of auxiliary enzymes to shift the reaction equilibrium towards product formation. In fact, isopropylamine is probably one of the most favored donor molecules since it is cheap and achiral but it is supposed to be accepted only by a limited number of amine transaminases.
This thesis focusses on the optimization and application of amine transaminases for asymmetric synthesis reactions en route to novel target chiral amines using isopropylamine as the preferred amine donor.