zur Suche springenzur Navigation springenzum Inhalt springen

Publikationen - Natur- und Wirkstoffchemie

Sortieren nach: Erscheinungsjahr Typ der Publikation

Zeige Ergebnisse 1 bis 10 von 92.

Preprints

Zabel, S.; Brandt, W.; Porzel, A.; Athmer, B.; Kortbeek, R. W. J.; Bleeker, P. M.; Tissier, A.; Two novel 7-epi-zingiberene derivatives with biological activity from Solanum habrochaites are produced by a single cytochrome P450 monooxygenase bioRxiv (2020) DOI: 10.1101/2020.04.21.052571

Secretions from glandular trichomes potentially protect the plant against a variety of aggressors. In the tomato genus, wild species constitute a rich source of chemical diversity produced at the leaf surface by glandular trichomes. Previously, 7-epi-zingiberene produced in several accessions of Solanum habrochaites was found to confer resistance to whiteflies (Bemisia tabaci) and other insect pests. Here, we identify two derivatives of 7-epi-zingiberene from S. habrochaites that had not been reported as yet. We identified them as 9-hydroxy-zingiberene and 9-hydroxy-10,11-epoxyzingiberene. Using a combination of genetics and transcriptomics we identified a single cytochrome P450 oxygenase, ShCYP71D184 that carries out two successive oxidations to generate the two sesquiterpenoids. Bioactivity assays showed that only 9-hydroxy-10,11-epoxyzingiberene exhibits substantial toxicity against B. tabaci. In addition, both 9-hydroxy-zingiberene and 9-hydroxy-10,11-epoxyzingiberene display substantial growth inhibitory activities against a range of microorganisms, including Bacillus subtilis, Phytophtora infestans and Botrytis cinerea. Our work shows that trichome secretions from wild tomato species can provide protection against a wide variety of organisms. In addition, the availability of the genes encoding the enzymes for the pathway of 7-epi-zingiberene derivatives makes it possible to introduce this trait in cultivated tomato by precision breeding.
Preprints

Püllmann, P.; Knorrscheidt, A.; Münch, J.; Palme, P. R.; Hoehenwarter, W.; Marillonnet, S.; Alcalde, M.; Westermann, B.; Weissenborn, M. J.; A modular two yeast species secretion system for the production and preparative application of fungal peroxygenases bioRxiv (2020) DOI: 10.1101/2020.07.22.216432

Fungal unspecific peroxygenases (UPOs) are biocatalysts of outstanding interest. Providing access to novel UPOs using a modular secretion system was the central goal of this work. UPOs represent an enzyme class, catalysing versatile oxyfunctionalisation reactions on a broad substrate scope. They are occurring as secreted, glycosylated proteins bearing a haem-thiolate active site and solely rely on hydrogen peroxide as the oxygen source. Fungal peroxygenases are widespread throughout the fungal kingdom and hence a huge variety of UPO gene sequences is available. However, the heterologous production of UPOs in a fast-growing organism suitable for high throughput screening has only succeeded once—enabled by an intensive directed evolution campaign. Here, we developed and applied a modular Golden Gate-based secretion system, allowing the first yeast production of four active UPOs, their one-step purification and application in an enantioselective conversion on a preparative scale. The Golden Gate setup was designed to be broadly applicable and consists of the three module types: i) a signal peptide panel guiding secretion, ii) UPO genes, and iii) protein tags for purification and split-GFP detection. We show that optimal signal peptides could be selected for successful UPO secretion by combinatorial testing of 17 signal peptides for each UPO gene. The modular episomal system is suitable for use in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and was transferred to episomal and chromosomally integrated expression cassettes in Pichia pastoris. Shake flask productions in Pichia pastoris yielded up to 24 mg/L secreted UPO enzyme, which was employed for the preparative scale conversion of a phenethylamine derivative reaching 98.6 % ee. Our results demonstrate a rapid workflow from putative UPO gene to preparative scale enantioselective biotransformations.
Forschungsdaten

Stark, P.; Zab, C.; Porzel, A.; Franke, K.; Rizzo, P.; Wessjohann, L. A.; PSYCHE - a valuable experiment in plant NMR-metabolomics RADAR (2020) DOI: 10.22000/338

Dataset: NMR raw dataInstrument: Agilent VNMRS 600 NMR spectrometer
Publikation

Vasco, A. V.; Brode, M.; Méndez, Y.; Valdés, O.; Rivera, D. G.; Wessjohann, L. A.; Synthesis of Lactam-Bridged and Lipidated Cyclo-Peptides as Promising Anti-Phytopathogenic Agents Molecules 25, 811, (2020) DOI: 10.3390/molecules25040811

Antimicrobial resistance to conventional antibiotics and the limited alternatives to combat plant-threatening pathogens are worldwide problems. Antibiotic lipopeptides exert remarkable membrane activity, which usually is not prone to fast resistance formation, and often show organism-type selectivity. Additional modes of action commonly complement the bioactivity profiles of such compounds. The present work describes a multicomponent-based methodology for the synthesis of cyclic polycationic lipopeptides with stabilized helical structures. The protocol comprises an on solid support Ugi-4-component macrocyclization in the presence of a lipidic isocyanide. Circular dichroism was employed to study the influence of both macrocyclization and lipidation on the amphiphilic helical structure in water and micellar media. First bioactivity studies against model phytopathogens demonstrated a positive effect of the lipidation on the antimicrobial activity.
Publikation

Vasco, A. V.; Moya, C. G.; Gröger, S.; Brandt, W.; Balbach, J.; Pérez, C. S.; Wessjohann, L. A.; Rivera, D. G.; Insights into the secondary structures of lactam N-substituted stapled peptides Org. Biomol. Chem. 18, 3838-3842, (2020) DOI: 10.1039/D0OB00767F

Stapled peptides derived from the Ugi macrocyclization comprise a special class of cyclopeptides with an N-substituted lactam bridge cross-linking two amino acid side chains. Herein we report a comprehensive analysis of the structural factors influencing the secondary structure of these cyclic peptides in solution. Novel insights into the s-cis/s-trans isomerism and the effect of N-functionalization on the conformation are revealed.
Publikation

Ur Rehman, N.; Halim, S. A.; Khan, M.; Hussain, H.; Yar Khan, H.; Khan, A.; Abbas, G.; Rafiq, K.; Al-Harrasi, A.; Antiproliferative and Carbonic Anhydrase II Inhibitory Potential of Chemical Constituents from Lycium shawii and Aloe vera: Evidence from In Silico Target Fishing and In Vitro Testing Pharmaceuticals 13, 94, (2020) DOI: 10.3390/ph13050094

Lycium shawii Roem. & Schult and resin of Aloe vera (L.) BURM. F. are commonly used in Omani traditional medication against various ailments. Herein, their antiproliferative and antioxidant potential was explored. Bioassay-guided fractionation of the methanol extract of both plants led to the isolation of 14 known compounds, viz., 1–9 from L. shawii and 10–20 from A. vera. Their structures were confirmed by combined spectroscopic techniques including 1D (1H and 13C) and 2D (HMBC, HSQC, COSY) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). The cytotoxic potential of isolates was tested against the triple-negative breast cancer cell line (MDA-MB-231). Compound 5 exhibited excellent antiproliferative activity in a range of 31 μM, followed by compounds 1–3, 7, and 12, which depicted IC50 values in the range of 35–60 μM, while 8, 6, and 9 also demonstrated IC50 values >72 μM. Subsequently, in silico target fishing was applied to predict the most potential cellular drug targets of the active compounds, using pharmacophore modeling and inverse molecular docking approach. The extensive in silico analysis suggests that our compounds may target carbonic anhydrase II (CA-II) to exert their anticancer activities. When tested on CA-II, compounds 5 (IC50 = 14.4 µM), 12 (IC50 = 23.3), and 2 (IC50 = 24.4 µM) showed excellent biological activities in vitro. Additionally, the ethyl acetate fraction of both plants showed promising antioxidant activity. Among the isolated compounds, 4 possesses the highest antioxidant (55 μM) activity followed by 14 (241 μM). The results indicated that compound 4 can be a promising candidate for antioxidant drugs, while compound 5 is a potential candidate for anticancer drugs.
Publikation

Ur Rehman, N.; Hussain, H.; Khan, H. Y.; Abbas, G.; Hidayatullah, .; Al-Harrasi, A.; A New Anticancer Bisflavan-3-Ol from Boerhavia elegans Chem. Nat. Compd. 56, 235-238, (2020) DOI: 10.1007/s10600-020-02995-3

A new a bisflavan-3-ol, boerhavianane (1), was isolated from Boerhavia elegans L. The structure of the flavanol dimer was elucidated by detailed spectroscopic analysis including 1H, 13C NMR, COSY, HMQC, HMBC, and ESI-MS. Boerhavianane (1) was evaluated for its anticancer activity and demonstrated a significant reduction in the viability of breast cancer cells in a concentration-dependent manner with an IC50 value of 38.48 μg/mL. Moreover, boerhavianane (1) was also screened for DPPH antioxidant activity and acetyl cholinesterase, xanthine oxidase, urease, and α-glucosidase enzyme inhibition activities. Preliminary results showed that it exhibited significant inhibition (81.0 ± 2.0%) against urease enzyme, whereas for DPPH radical scavenging it showed moderate activity (75.0 ± 1.5%).
Publikation

Tchatchouang Noulala, C. G.; Fotso, G. W.; Rennert, R.; Lenta, B. N.; Sewald, N.; Arnold, N.; Happi, E. N.; Ngadjui, B. T.; Mesomeric form of quaternary indoloquinazoline alkaloid and other constituents from the Cameroonian Rutaceae Araliopsis soyauxii Engl. Biochem. Syst. Ecol. 91, 104050, (2020) DOI: 10.1016/j.bse.2020.104050

A mesomeric form of quaternary indoloquinazoline alkaloid, soyauxinium chloride (1) was obtained through the chemical investigation of stem bark and roots of Araliopsis soyauxii Engl. [syn. Vepris soyauxii (Engl.) Mziray] (Rutaceae) together with fifteen known compounds, including three furoquinoline alkaloids, three 2-quinolones, two limonoids, two triterpenes, two steroids, a coumarin, an acridone alkaloid, and a flavonoid glycoside. Their structures were established by comprehensive spectroscopic and spectrometric analyses (1D and 2D NMR, ESI-HR-MS) and by comparison with previously reported data. 13C NMR data of araliopsinine are also reported here for the first time. The isolated compounds were screened in vitro for their effects on the viability of two different human cancer cell lines, namely prostate PC-3 adenocarcinoma cells and colorectal HT-29 adenocarcinoma cells. However, none of the tested compounds exhibited strong anti-proliferative or cytotoxic activities, to either prostate PC-3 cells or colon HT-29 cells. At 100 μM, the furoquinoline maculine showed a slightly increased anti-proliferative effect, however, exclusively on HT-29 cells. The chemotaxonomic significance of the isolated compounds has also been discussed.
Publikation

Tabassum, N.; Eschen-Lippold, L.; Athmer, B.; Baruah, M.; Brode, M.; Maldonado-Bonilla, L. D.; Hoehenwarter, W.; Hause, G.; Scheel, D.; Lee, J.; Phosphorylation‐dependent control of an RNA granule‐localized protein that fine‐tunes defence gene expression at a post‐transcriptional level Plant J. 101, 1023-1039, (2020) DOI: 10.1111/tpj.14573

Mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades are key signalling modules of plant defence responses to pathogen‐associated molecular patterns (PAMPs, e.g. bacterial flg22 peptide). The Tandem Zinc Finger Protein 9 (TZF9) is an RNA‐binding protein that is phosphorylated by two PAMP‐responsive MAPKs, MPK3 and MPK6. We mapped the major phosphosites in TZF9 and showed their importance for controlling in vitro RNA‐binding activity, in vivo flg22‐induced rapid disappearance of TZF9‐labelled processing body‐like structures and TZF9 protein turnover. Microarray analysis showed a strong discordance between transcriptome (total mRNA) and translatome (polysome‐associated mRNA) in the tzf9 mutant, with more mRNAs associated to ribosomes in the absence of TZF9. This suggests that TZF9 may sequester and inhibit translation of subsets of mRNAs. Fittingly, TZF9 physically interacts with poly(A)‐binding protein 2 (PAB2), a hallmark constituent of stress granules – a site for stress‐induced translational stalling/arrest. TZF9 even promotes stress granule assembly in the absence of stress. Hence, MAPKs may control defence gene expression post‐transcriptionally through release from translation arrest within TZF9‐PAB2‐containing RNA granules or perturbing PAB2 functions in translation control (e.g. in the mRNA closed‐loop model of translation).
Publikation

Steinbeck, C.; Koepler, O.; Bach, F.; Herres-Pawlis, S.; Jung, N.; Liermann, J. C.; Neumann, S.; Razum, M.; Baldauf, C.; Biedermann, F.; Bocklitz, T. W.; Boehm, F.; Broda, F.; Czodrowski, P.; Engel, T.; Hicks, M. G.; Kast, S. M.; Kettner, C.; Koch, W.; Lanza, G.; Link, A.; Mata, R. A.; Nagel, W. E.; Porzel, A.; Schlörer, N.; Schulze, T.; Weinig, H.-G.; Wenzel, W.; Wessjohann, L. A.; Wulle, S.; NFDI4Chem - Towards a National Research Data Infrastructure for Chemistry in Germany Res. Ideas Outcomes 6, e55852, (2020) DOI: 10.3897/rio.6.e55852

The vision of NFDI4Chem is the digitalisation of all key steps in chemical research to support scientists in their efforts to collect, store, process, analyse, disclose and re-use research data. Measures to promote Open Science and Research Data Management (RDM) in agreement with the FAIR data principles are fundamental aims of NFDI4Chem to serve the chemistry community with a holistic concept for access to research data. To this end, the overarching objective is the development and maintenance of a national research data infrastructure for the research domain of chemistry in Germany, and to enable innovative and easy to use services and novel scientific approaches based on re-use of research data. NFDI4Chem intends to represent all disciplines of chemistry in academia. We aim to collaborate closely with thematically related consortia. In the initial phase, NFDI4Chem focuses on data related to molecules and reactions including data for their experimental and theoretical characterisation.This overarching goal is achieved by working towards a number of key objectives:Key Objective 1: Establish a virtual environment of federated repositories for storing, disclosing, searching and re-using research data across distributed data sources. Connect existing data repositories and, based on a requirements analysis, establish domain-specific research data repositories for the national research community, and link them to international repositories.Key Objective 2: Initiate international community processes to establish minimum information (MI) standards for data and machine-readable metadata as well as open data standards in key areas of chemistry. Identify and recommend open data standards in key areas of chemistry, in order to support the FAIR principles for research data. Finally, develop standards, if there is a lack.Key Objective 3: Foster cultural and digital change towards Smart Laboratory Environments by promoting the use of digital tools in all stages of research and promote subsequent Research Data Management (RDM) at all levels of academia, beginning in undergraduate studies curricula.Key Objective 4: Engage with the chemistry community in Germany through a wide range of measures to create awareness for and foster the adoption of FAIR data management. Initiate processes to integrate RDM and data science into curricula. Offer a wide range of training opportunities for researchers.Key Objective 5: Explore synergies with other consortia and promote cross-cutting development within the NFDI.Key Objective 6: Provide a legally reliable framework of policies and guidelines for FAIR and open RDM.
IPB Mainnav Search