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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
411

Mechanisms of H2O2-induced oxidative stress in endothelial cells

Coyle, Christian Hannon 01 January 2004 (has links)
Development of an in vitro model for the early stages of cardiovascular disease is a current necessity. Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the United States and throughout the world. Oxidative stress and reactive oxygen species have been implicated in cardiovascular disease development. An in vitro model of these processes will improve our understanding of cardiovascular disease development and allow for the development of additional treatments. Atherosclerosis is an inflammatory disease and increased levels of H2O2 are associated with inflammation. The model focuses on H2O2-induced oxidative stress under static and shear conditions. Previous studies have documented increased O2.- and increased cytotoxicity in smooth muscle cells exposed to H2O2. Under static culture, endothelial cells exposed to H2O2, exhibited increased O2.- over basal levels via NOS and NAPDH oxidase pathways. Increased O2.- was attenuated by MnSOD adenoviral-mediated upregulation and endothelial cell exposure to Tiron. This suggests NOS and NADPH oxidase as sources of increased O2.- under H2O2-induced oxidative stress. Endothelial cell cytotoxicity was increased with H2O2 exposure. The increase in cytotoxicity was diminished upon exposure to Tiron or L-NAME. Under shear conditions (8.2 dynes/cm2), endothelial cells exposed to H2O2 exhibited increased O2.- compared to control via an L-NAME (specific inhibitor NOS) and Apocynin (NADPH oxidase inhibitor) inhibitable mechanism. This suggests NOS and NADPH oxidase as sources of increased O2.- under H2O2-induced oxidative stress. The increased O2.- was attenuated with MnSOD adenoviral-mediated upregulation and endothelial cell exposure to Tiron (an O2.-scavenger). Endothelial cell attachment under shear with exposure to H2O2 was improved with MnSOD adenoviral-mediated upregulation as observed by decreased loss of the endothelial cell monolayer compared with H2O2 exposed endothelial cells. Endothelial cells exposed to H2O2 exhibit increased O2.-, suggesting that H2O2-induced oxidative stress may be a reasonable model for atherosclerosis. NOS and NADPH oxidase co-inhibition under shear and static culture demonstrated that NOS and NADPH oxidase inhibition is non-additive under static culture, yet additive under shear. Co-inhibition results suggest a complex relationship between the two enzymes that requires additional experimentation to deconvolve.
412

Determining the Usefulness of Aerobic and Anaerobic Enzyme Assays as Proxies for Rockfish Ecological Data.

Hudson, Erica M 22 October 2008 (has links)
Rockfish are commercially and recreationally important, yet due to the in habitat depths at which rockfish inhabit, little is known about their ecology. As a consequence, management of rockfish population as a fishery resource is a work in progress. In particular, changes in physiological condition aver the course of the year is poorly described. This study examined 19 different species of Sebastes from the Southern California Bight over four seasons (late summer, fall, winter, and spring) using metabolic enzyme assays. Enzymes used were lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), malate dehydrogenase (MDH), pyruvate kinase (PK), and citrate synthase (CS). Some muscle composition data (percent water, percent protein, percent lipid, and protein as a percentage of wet mass) were also used to help interpret the enzyme data. Enzyme activity was lowest in the summer when expressed as activity per gram wet weight but when it was expressed per gram protein the trend was reversed. We found that the rockfish tend to have the highest protein as a percentage of wet mass (P%WM) in the spring right before the upwelling period begins and have the lowest P%WM in late summer after the peak of upwelling. Their metabolic poise (represented as CS/LDH) grouped according to locomotory habit (benthic or bentho-pelagic). A mass and oxygen consumption plot also showed that the species group according to locomotory habit. With those known to be benthic grouped together and those species that are known to more actively swimming had higher values. This knowledge could be used to infer whether a rockfish that hasn't been well studied is benthic or bentho-pelagic.
413

A Comparison of Exhaled Breath Nitric Oxide Between Old and Young Individuals

Gordon, Robert L. 30 March 2004 (has links)
BACKGROUND: Older individuals suffer from higher rates of pulmonary infections than younger individuals. In addition, older individuals have increased morbidity and mortality due to pulmonary infections when compared to younger individuals. The physiological and immunological reasons for these aforementioned differences are not clear. Recently, non-invasive markers of the lung's physiologic and immunologic status have been recognized. This study employs one of these non-invasive markers, exhaled nitric oxide, in an attempt to determine how the airways may change with age, predisposing older individuals to pulmonary diseases and poorer outcomes as compared to younger individuals. METHODS: Exhaled nitric oxide measurements were obtained from a group of 25 older subjects (61 to 79 years old, median 72 years old) and a group of 23 younger subjects (21 to 30 years old, median 24 years old) that were non-smokers with no history of pulmonary disease, no recent respiratory infections, and no history of environmental allergies. A focused history and physical exam along with spirometry were used to confirm the normal pulmonary status of each subject. Exhaled nitric oxide was measured following the American Thoracic Society recommendations using the Sievers Nitric Oxide Analyzer 280i. The exhaled nitric oxide values for the old and young groups were compared using the Wilcoxon Rank Sum test. RESULTS: For the older subjects, the median exhaled NO concentration was 36.9 ppb. For the younger subjects, the median exhaled NO concentration was 18.7 ppb. These exhaled NO concentrations are significantly different (p = 0.0011). CONCLUSIONS: The exhaled NO concentrations are significantly higher in older individuals than in younger individuals. The reasons for this difference along with the significance are unclear and further studies will be necessary to further evaluate these issues.
414

Design, Synthese und biologische Testung von KasA-Inhibitoren als potentielle Wirkstoffe gegen Mycobacterium tuberculosis / Design, synthesis and biological testing of KasA-inhibitors as potential drugs against mycobacterium tuberculosis

Topf, Christine January 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Im Mittelpunkt dieser Arbeit stand die Entwicklung neuer Wirkstoffe gegen Tuberkulose, einer schwerwiegenden bakteriellen Infektionskrankheit, die am häufigsten die Lunge befällt. Die Entwicklung neuer Arzneistoffe gegen diese Erkrankung ist immens wichtig, da nach Angaben der WHO weltweit jährlich über 1 Million Menschen an den Folgen der Tuberkulose sterben, derzeit kein effizienter Impfstoff zur Verfügung steht und sich die Therapiemöglichkeiten auf wenige Arzneistoffe beschränken. Zudem steigt weltweit das Auftreten von arzneistoff- und totalresistenten Tuberkuloseformen. Tuberkulose wird vorwiegend durch das Mycobacterium tuberculosis erregt. Eine Besonderheit des M. tuberculosis stellt die mykobakterielle Zellwand dar, da diese durch einen hohen Anteil an Fettsäuren besonders wachsartig und dick ist. Die mykobakterielle Fettsäuresynthese unterscheidet sich signifikant von der Synthese eukaryotischer Fettsäuren. Daher besteht die Möglichkeit, Inhibitoren der mykobakteriellen Fettsäuresynthese als effektive und selektive neue Antituberkulotika zu entwickeln. Zielstruktur dieser Arbeit ist KasA (β-Ketoacylsynthase), ein Enzym der mykobakteriellen Fettsäuresynthese II, das die Kondensation zwischen der wachsenden Fettsäurekette und Malonyl-ACP katalysiert. Ein literaturbekannter KasA-Inhibitor ist Thiolactomycin, ein Thiolacton-Derivat mit einer schwachen inhibitorischen Aktivität (IC50: 242 µM; Kd 226 µM), für den eine KasA-Komplexstruktur verfügbar ist. Ziel der Arbeit war es, mittels computergestützten Wirkstoffdesigns neue Leitstrukturen für KasA-Inhibitoren zu entwickeln und davon abgeleitet Substanzbibliotheken kleiner Moleküle zu synthetisieren. Zur Bestimmung der In-vitro-Aktivitäten sollte KasA exprimiert und ein Assay etabliert werden. Theoretische und experimentelle Affinitäten sollten anschließend analysiert und bewertet werden. Zur Identifizierung neuer potenzieller KasA-Inhibitoren wurde mit Hilfe des Thiolactomycin-Bindemodus ein Pharmakophor-Modell erstellt. In diesem wurden die essentielle Wasserstoffbrücke zwischen den Histidinen und dem Carbonyl-Sauerstoff des Thiolactonrings, zwei hydrophobe Bereiche und ein verbindendes Strukturelement definiert und das Volumen des Pharmakophors begrenzt. Das Screening der Datenbank erfolgte mit GOLD4.0 und GOLDscore. Zur Identifizierung der 16 aussichtsreichsten Verbindungen wurden Rescorings mit ChemScore und sfc_score290m durchgeführt, sowie verschiedene physikochemische Deskriptoren und der errechnete Bindungsmodus einbezogen. Ausgewählte Verbindungen des Screenings wurden synthetisiert. Weitere Variationen wurden durch Einführung von Substituenten und Bromierung und Nitrierung der Grundgerüste erhalten. Zur biologischen Testung dieser Verbindungen konnte KasA in M. smegmatis exprimiert werden. Die Reinigung des Proteins erfolgte mittels Affinitäts- und Größenausschlusschromatographie. Affinitätswerte an KasA konnten mit einem Fluoreszenzassays bestimmt werden, da in jedem KasA-Monomer vier Tryptophane zur intrinsischen Fluoreszenz beitragen. Die Bindung eines Inhibitors in die TLM-Bindetasche führte zum Quenching der Fluoreszenz von KasA und konnte unter Berücksichtigung von Verdünnungs- und inneren Filtereffekten zur Berechnung der Dissoziationskonstante Kd herangezogen werden. Die In-vitro-Untersuchungen der Inhibitoren von KasA zeigten im Vergleich zu TLM eine Verbesserung der Affinität bis zu einem Faktor von 11, die beste Verbindung war das Nitroisatin-Derivat 2l (22.1 µM). Einen Hinweis auf Hemmung des Wachstums von Mykobakterien war für die Verbindungen 2e (5-Nitro-1-phenethyl-2,3-indolindion) und 3a (5,7-Dibrom-1-(4-chlorbenzyl)indolin-2,3-dion) ersichtlich. Die übrigen Verbindungen zeigten keine Aktivität, was dadurch bedingt sein kann, dass sie Substanzen nicht lipophil genug sind (clogP-Werte zwischen 1 und 3), um die mykobakterielle Zellwand zu durchdringen. Analog dem Docking im Rahmen des virtuellen Screenings wurde ein Docking mit GOLD4.0 und GOLDscore für die Substanzbibliothek durchgeführt. Verglichen mit den In-vitro-Affinitäten konnte eine gute Übereinstimmung in der Differenzierung der Substanzklassen gefunden werden. Da kleine Moleküle mit großer biologischer Aktivität zu bevorzugen sind, wurde die „ligand efficiency“, die inhibitorische Potenz unabhängig vom Molekulargewicht, für die Verbindungen berechnet. Für die Substanzbibliothek wurde eine gute Korrelation von „ligand efficiency“ und GOLDscore pro Schweratom erzielt (R2=0.65), beste Substanzgruppen waren monoalkylierte Uracil- und Isatin-Derivate. Der beste Wert wurde für das Isatin-Derivat 1a erzielt. Mit den erarbeiteten theoretischen und experimentellen Ergebnissen und den etablierten Methoden bietet diese Arbeit eine wichtige Grundlage, um erste „hits“ von KasA-Inhibitoren zu neuen Leitstrukturen für Wirkstoffe gegen Mycobakterium tuberculosis zu entwickeln. / This work focused on the development of new antibiotics against tuberculosis, a severe bacterial infection mainly affecting the lung. Currently, according to the WHO more than 1 million people annually die from tuberculosis. Furthermore, the therapy is limited to inefficient vaccines and a small number of antibiotics, and complicated by multi- or even totally resistant mycobacterial strains occurring worldwide. Thus, new active compounds against tuberculosis are urgently needed. Tuberculosis is mainly caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which is characterized by a unique thick and waxy cell wall containing a high percentage of mycolic acids. Due to the fact that the biosynthesis of mycolic acids is not carried out in eukaryotes, it is a reasonable strategy to design inhibitors of the FAS II system as effective and selective antibiotics against mycobacteria. The enzyme of interest in our work is the β-keto-acyl ACP synthase (KasA), an elongating enzyme in the FAS II system of Mycobacterium tuberculosis which catalyses the condensation between the mycolic acid and malonyl-ACP. Recently, a crystal structure of KasA in complex with Thiolactomycin, a weak thiolactone-type inhibitor (IC50: 242 µM; Kd 226 µM), was solved. Aim of this work was to identify new potential lead structures for KasA-inhibitors by virtual screening. A library of small molecules was synthesized and tested for ability to inhibit KasA, therefore KasA was expressed. In silico and in vitro affinities were analyzed and compared. To identify new lead structures for potential KasA inhibitors, a pharmacophore model based on TLM was developed. This contained the essential H-bond between the carbonyl-oxygen of TLM with the histidines, two hydrophobic features and a linker feature between them. Additionally, volume constraints were applied to limit the size of molecules matching the pharmacophore model. Screening of a database of commercially available compounds was performed with GOLD4.0 and GOLDscore. 16 Promising structures were identified by implementation of rescorings with ChemScore and sfc_score290m, by calculation of physicochemical descriptors and by visual inspection of the predicted binding mode. Selected substances of the virtual screening were synthesized. Based on these substances the core fragments were varied by bromination and nitration. Via subsequent introduction of substituents a small library of compounds was created. For biological testings KasA was expressed in M. smegmatis. Purification of the protein was achieved by affinity and size exclusion chromatography. Dissociation constants were determined by a fluorescence assay: In each KasA monomer four tryptophanes cause intrinsic fluorescence, thus binding of inhibitors led to quenching of the fluorescence. Therefore, dissociation constants of ligands were calculated considering the dilution and inner filter effects. The in vitro studies of the KasA inhibitors showed, in comparison to TLM, a 11fold improvement of the affinity. The best inhibitor was the nitroisatine derivative 2l (22.1 µM). 2e (5-Nitro-1-phenethyl-2,3-indolindione) and 3a (5,7-Dibromo-1-(4-chlorbenzyl)indolin-2,3-dione) were able to inhibit the growth of mycobacteria. No other substances showed any antimycobacterial activity, which might be due to their low lipophilicity (clogP varies from 1 to 3), hence which hinders an efficient penetration through the highly lipophilic mycobacterial cell wall. In the future, the precise cause of this fact has to be determined to counteract with systematic structural modifications. The compound library was docked into KasA by using GOLD4.0 and GOLDscore with analogous settings as in the virtual screening. The analysis of the results showed an agreement between in vitro and in silico outcomes for the substance classes. As small molecules of high activity are preferred in drug development, ligand efficiencies of the inhibitors were calculated which describe inhibitory potency independent of molecular weight. A good correlation between ligand efficiency and GOLDscore per heavy atom was observed. Best ligand efficiencies were obtained by the classes of monoalkylated uracile- and isatine-derivatives, the best substance was the isatine-derivative 1a. Due to the established methods combined with computer-based and experimental results, this work provides an important foundation for the future development of first “hits” of KasA-inhibitors to new lead structures of new drugs against mycobacterium tuberculosis.
415

Synthesis and biological testing of potential anti-tuberculosis drugs targeting the β-ketoacyl ACP synthase / Synthese und biologische Untersuchung von β-ketoacyl-ACP-Synthase-Inhibitoren als potentielle Antituberkulotika

Kesetovic, Diana January 2016 (has links) (PDF)
With 9.6 million new cases and 1.5 million deaths in 2014, tuberculosis (TB) is alongside with AIDS the most deadly infection.‎ Foremost, the increased prevalence of resistant strains of M. tuberculosis among the TB-infected population represents a serious thread. Hence, in the last decades, novel drug targets have been investigated worldwide. So far a relatively unexplored target is the cell wall enzyme β-ketoacyl-ACP-synthase “KasA”, which plays a crucial role in maintaining the membrane impermeability and hence the cell ability to resist to the immune response and drug therapy. KasA is a key enzyme in the fatty acid synthase “FAS-II” elongation cycle, responsible for the extension of the growing acyl chain within the biosynthesis of precursors for the most hydrophobic constituents of the cell wall – mycolic acids. Design of the novel KasA inhibitors, performed in the research group of Prof. Sotriffer by C. Topf and B. Schaefer, was based on the recently published crystal structure of KasA‎ in complex with its known inhibitor thiolactomycin (TLM). Considering the essential ligand-enzyme interactions, a pharmacophore model was built and applied in the virtual screening of a modified ZINC database. Selected hits with the best in silico affinity data have been reported by Topf‎ and Schaefer‎. In this work, two of the obtained hits were synthesized and their structure was systematically varied. First, a virtual screening hit, chromone-2-carboxamide derivative GS-71, was modified in the amide part. Since the most of the products possessed a very low solubility in the aqueous buffer medium used in biological assays, polar groups (nitro, succinamidyl and trimethyl-amino substituent in position 6 of the chromone ring or hydroxyl group on the benzene ring in the amide part have been inserted to the molecule. Further variations yielded diaryl ketones, diaryl ketone bearing a succinamidyl substituent, carboxamide bearing a methylpiperazinyl-4-oxobutanamido group and methyl-malonyl ester amides. Basically, the essential structural features necessary for the ligand-enzyme interactions have been maintained. The latter virtual screening hit, a pyrimidinone derivative VS-8‎ was synthesized and the structure was modified by substitution in positions 2, 4, 5 and 6 of the pyrimidine ring. Due to autofluorescence, detected in most of the products, this model structure was not further varied. Simultaneously, experiments on solubilization of the first chromone-2-carboxamides with cyclodextrins, cyclic oligosacharides known to form water-soluble inclusion complexes, were performed. Although the assessed solubility of the chromone 3b/DIMEB (1:3) mixture exceeded 14-fold the intrinsic one, the achieved 100 µM solubility was still not sufficient to be used as a stock solution in the binding assay. The experiments with cyclodextrin in combination with DMSO were ineffective. Owing to high material costs necessary for the appropriate cyclodextrin amounts, the aim focused on structural modification of the hydrophobic products. Precise structural data have been obtained from the solved crystal structures of three chromone derivatives: the screening hit GS-71 (3b), its trimethylammonium salt (18) and 6-nitro-substituted N-benzyl-N-methyl-chromone-2-carboxamide (9i). The first two compounds are nearly planar with an anti-/trans-rotamer configuration. In the latter structure, the carboxamide bridge is bent out of the chromone plane, showing an anti-rotamer, too. Considering the relatively low partition coefficient of compound 3b (cLogP = 2.32), the compound planarity and correlating tight molecular packing might be the factors significantly affecting its poor solubility. Regarding the biological results of the chromone-based compounds, similar structure-activity correlations could be drawn from the binding assay and the whole cell activity testing on M. tuberculosis. In both cases, the introduction of a nitro group to position 6 of the chromone ring and the presence of a flexible substituent in the amide part showed a positive effect. In the binding study, the nitro group at position 4 on the N-benzyl residue was of advantage, too. The highest enzyme affinity was observed for N-(4-nitrobenzyl)-chromone-2-carboxamide 4c (KD = 34 µM), 6-nitro substituted N-benzyl-chromone-2-carboxamide 9g (KD = 40 µM) and 6‑nitro-substituted N-(4-nitrobenzyl)-chromone-2-carboxamide 9j (KD = 31 µM), which could not be attributed to the fluorescence quenching potential of the nitro group. The assay interference potential of chromones, due to a covalent binding on the enzyme sulfhydryl groups, was found to be negligible at the assay conditions. Moderate in vivo activity was detected for 6‑nitro-substituted N-benzyl-chromone-2-carboxamide 9g and its N-benzyl-N-methyl-, N‑furylmethyl-, N-cyclohexyl- and N-cyclohexylmethyl derivatives 9i, 9d, 9e, 9f, for which MIC values 20 – 40 µM were assessed. Cytotoxicity was increased in the N‑cyclohexylmethyl derivative only. None of the pyrimidine-based compounds showed activity in vivo. The affinity of the model structure, VS-8, surpassed with KD = 97 µM the assessed affinity of TLM (KD = 142 µM). Since for the model chromone compound GS-71 no reliable KasA binding data could be obtained, a newly synthesized chromone derivative 9i was docked into the KasA binding site, in order to derive correlation between the in silico and in vitro assessed affinity. For the 6‑nitro-derivative 9i a moderate in vivo activity on M. tuberculosis was obtained. The in silico predicted pKi values for TLM and 9i were higher than the corresponding in vitro results, maintaining though a similar tendency, i.e., the both affinity values for compound 9i (pKi predicted = 6.64, pKD experimental = 4.02) surpassed those obtained for TLM (pKi predicted = 5.27, pKD experimental = 3.84). Nevertheless, the experimental pKD values are considered preliminary results. The binding assay method has been improved in order to acquire more accurate data. Owing to the method development, limited enzyme batches and solubility issues, only selected compounds could be evaluated. The best hits, together with the compounds active on the whole cells of M. tuberculosis, will be submitted to the kinetic enzyme assay, in order to confirm the TLM-like binding mechanism. Regarding the in vivo testing results, no correlations could be drawn between the predicted membrane permeability values and the experimental data, as for the most active compounds 9e and 9f, a very low permeability was anticipated (0.4 and 0.7 %, respectively). Further biological tests would be required to investigate the action- or transport mode. / Mit 9.6 Millionen Neuerkrankungen und 1.5 Millionen Todesfällen im Jahr 2014 ist Tuberkulose (TB) neben AIDS die häufigste Todesursache unter Infektionskrankheiten.‎ Insbesondere die zunehmende Verbreitung resistenter Stämme von M. tuberculosis stellt eine ernste Gefahr dar. In den letzten Jahrzehnten wurde daher weltweit nach neuen möglichen Wirkstoff-Zielen gesucht. Bisher noch relativ unerforschtes Ziel ist das Zellwand-Enzym β Ketoacyl-ACP-Synthase "KasA", das eine entscheidende Rolle bei der Aufrechterhaltung der Membran-Dichtigkeit spielt, und somit den Zellen ermöglicht, gegen den Immunabwehr und Arzneimitteltherapie Resistenz zu zeigen. KasA ist ein Schlüsselenzym in der Fettsäure-Synthase-(FAS-II)-Elongationsrunde, die für die Erweiterung der wachsenden Acylkette während der Biosynthese der Vorstufen der hydrophobesten Zellwand-Bestandteilen – der Mykolsäuren, verantwortlich ist. Das Design der neuen KasA-Hemmer, das im Arbeitskreis von Prof. Sotriffer von C. Topf und B. Schäfer durchgeführt wurde, basiert auf der kürzlich veröffentlichten Kristallstruktur von KasA im Komplex mit seinem bekannten Inhibitor Thiolactomycin (TLM)‎. In Anbetracht der essentiellen Ligand-Enzym-Wechselwirkungen wurde ein Pharmakophor-Modell erstellt und im virtuellen Screening einer modifizierten ZINC-Datenbank angewendet. Die ausgewählten “Hits“ mit den besten In-silico-Affinitätsdaten wurden in den Doktorarbeiten von Topf‎ und Schaefer‎ veröffentlicht. In Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden zwei der erhaltenen “Hits“ synthetisiert und ihre Struktur systematisch variiert. Erste Modellstruktur, das Chromon-2-Carboxamid-Derivat GS-71‎. wurde zunächst in dem Amid-Rest modifiziert. Da die meisten Produkte (3a-p, 4a-k) eine sehr geringe Löslichkeit im wässrigen Puffermedium aufwiesen, wurden polare Gruppen in das Molekül eingefügt (Nitro, Succinamidyl- und Trimethyl-Amino-Substituenten in der 6 Stellung des Chromon-Rings, oder eine Hydroxyl-Gruppe am Benzolring im Amid-Teil. Weitere Variationen ergaben Diarylketone, ein Diarylketon mit der Succinamidyl Kette, ein Carboxamid mit dem Methylpiperazinyl-4-oxobutanamido-Substituenten und Methyl-Malonyl-Ester-Amide. Grundsätzlich wurden alle Strukturmerkmale notwendig für die Ligand-Enzym-Wechselwirkungen beibehalten. Die letztere Modellstruktur aus dem virtuellen Screening, das Pyrimidinon Derivat VS-8‎ wurde synthetisiert, und die Struktur wurde durch Substitution in den Positionen 2, 4, 5 und 6 des Pyrimidin-Rings modifiziert. Wegen Eigenfluoreszenz, detektiert in den meisten Produkten, wurde diese Modellstruktur nicht weiter variiert. Gleichzeitig wurden Experimente zur Solubilisierung der ersten Chromon-2-Carbonsäureamide mit Cyclodextrinen, cyclischen Oligosacchariden, die bekanntlich wasserlösliche Einschlusskomplexe bilden, durchgeführt. Obwohl die gemessene Löslichkeit des 3b/DIMEB (1:3)-Gemisches die intrinsische Löslichkeit um das 14-fache überschritt, war die erzielte Löslichkeit von 100 µM noch nicht ausreichend, um diese Lösung als Stammlösung im Assay zu verwenden. Die Experimente mit Cyclodextrin in Kombination mit DMSO waren unproduktiv. Aufgrund der hohen Materialkosten für die benötigten Cyclodextrinmengen wurden die Löslichkeit-Tests an dieser Stelle abgebrochen und eine strukturelle Modifizierung der hydrophoben Produkte stand in Vordergrund des Interesses. Genaue Strukturdaten wurden aus den aufgeklärten Kristallstrukturen von drei Chromon-Derivaten, der Modellstruktur GS-71 (3b), seiner Trimethylammoniumsalz (18) und dem 6‑Nitro-substituierten N-Benzyl-N-methyl-Chromon-2-Carboxamid (9i), erhalten. Die ersten beiden Verbindungen sind mit einer anti-/trans-Rotamer Konfiguration fast planar. Die Carbonsäureamid-Brücke der letzteren Struktur, die ebenso ein anti-Rotamer darstellt, wird aus der Chromon Ebene gebogen. Angesichts des relativ geringen Verteilungskoeffizientes der Verbindung 3b (clogP = 2.32), die Ebenheit des Moleküls und das damit verbundene enge Molekülpackung könnten die wesentlich schlechtere Löslichkeit begründen. In Bezug auf die biologischen Ergebnisse der Chromon-basierten Verbindungen, ähnliche Struktur-Aktivitäts-Beziehungen können aus dem Bindungs-Assay, sowie aus dem Ganzzellaktivitätstests auf M. tuberculosis gezogen werden. In beiden Fällen zeigte die Einführung einer Nitrogruppe in die Position 6 des Chromon-Rings und das Vorhandensein eines flexiblen Substituents im Amidrest einen positiven Effekt. In dem Bindungs-Assay war die Nitrogruppe in Position 4 des N-Benzyl-Rests ebenso vorteilhaft. Die höchste Enzymaffinität wurde im Falle des N-(4-Nitrobenzyl)-Chromon-2-Carboxamid 4c (KD = 34 µM), des substituierten 6-nitro-N-Benzyl-Chromon-2-Carboxamid 9g (KD = 40 µM) und des 6-Nitro-substituierten N-(4-Nitrobenzyl)-Chromon-2-Carboxamid 9j (KD = 31 µM), beobachtet, allerdings konnte sie nicht dem Fluoreszenzlöschungspotenzial der Nitrogruppe zugeschrieben werden. Das Assay-Störpotential der Chromonverbindungen aufgrund einer kovalenten Bindung an die Sulfhydryl-Gruppen des Enzyms zeigte sich in den Assay-Bedingungen als vernachlässigbar. Moderate in vivo-Aktivitäten wurden für den 6-nitro substituierten N‑Benzyl-Chromon-2-Carboxamid 9g und dessen N-Benzyl-N-Methyl- (9i), N‑Furfurylmethyl-(9d), N-Cyclohexyl- (9e) und N-Cyclohexylmethyl- (9f) Derivate, für denen die MIC-Werte zwischen 20 und 40 µM erhalten wurden (siehe Tab. 17). Die Zytotoxizität wurde erhöht nur im Falle des N-Cyclohexylmethyl Derivates. Keine der Pyrimidin-basierten Verbindungen wies eine Aktivität in vivo auf. Die KasA-Affinität der Modellstruktur VS-8 übertraf mit KD = 97 µM die gemessene Affinität von TLM (KD = 142 µM). Da für die Modell Chromon-Verbindung GS-71 keine zuverlässigen KasA Bindungsdaten erhalten werden konnten, ein neu-synthetisierte Chromon-Derivat 9i wurde in die KasA Bindungsstelle gedockt, um die Korrelation zwischen den In-silico- und In-vitro-Affinitätswerten abzuleiten. Für den 6-Nitroderivat 9i wurde eine mäßige Aktivität in vivo auf M. tuberculosis bestimmt. Die in silico-vorhergesagten pKi-Werte für TLM und 9i waren allgemein höher als die entsprechenden experimentellen Ergebnisse. Sie bewiesen allerdings eine ähnliche Tendenz, d.h. die beiden Affinitätswerte für die Verbindung 9i (pKi vorhergesagt = 6.64, pKD experimentell = 4.02) übertrafen die Werte von TLM (pKi vorhergesagt = 5.27, pKD experimentell = 3.84). Dennoch sind die experimentellen Affinitätsdaten nur als vorläufige Resultate zu betrachten, solange die Bindungsweise mittels des kinetischen Enzymassays verifiziert wird. Die Assay-Methode wurde verbessert, um zuverlässigere Daten zu erhalten. Aufgrund der Verfahrensentwicklung, den limitierten Enzymchargen und Löslichkeitsprobleme konnten nur ausgewählte Verbindungen bewertet werden. Die besten “Hits“, zusammen mit den Verbindungen, die auf den ganzen Zellen von M. tuberculosis aktiv waren, werden dem kinetischen Enzymtest vorgelegt. In Bezug auf die In-vivo-Testergebnisse, es konnten keine Korrelationen zwischen den vorhergesagten Membranpermeabilität-Werten und den experimentellen Daten gezogen werden, da bei den wirksamsten Verbindungen 9e und 9f nur eine sehr geringe Permeabilität erwartet wurde (zu 0.4 und 0.7 %). Weitere biologische Tests wären erforderlich, um das Wirkungsmechanismus oder die Transportweise zu untersuchen.
416

Polyester synthases and polyester granule assembly : a thesis presented to Massey University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Microbiology

Peters, Verena January 2008 (has links)
PHAs are a class of biopolymers consisting of (R)-3-hydroxy-fatty acids and are produced by the majority of eubacteria and some archaeal bacteria as carbon storage material. In general, PHA is synthesised when a carbon source is available in excess while another essential nutrient is limited. The key enzyme of PHA biosynthesis, the PHA synthase, catalyses the polymerisation of the substrate (R)-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA to PHA accompanied by the release of coenzyme A. PHA is stored intracellularly as inclusions, the so-called PHA granules. When the external carbon source becomes exhausted, bacteria can metabolise these carbon inclusions by degradation of the polymer. PHA granules are water-insoluble, spherical inclusions of approximately 50-500 nm in diameter which consist of a hydrophobic polyester core surrounded by a phospholipid layer with embedded and attached proteins. One could consider isolated PHA granules as bio-beads due to their structure and size. In this study we tested if the PHA synthase can be used as an anchor molecule in order to display proteins of interest at the PHA granule surface. Furthermore, these modified PHA granules were analysed for their potential applicability as bio-beads in biotechnological procedures. The concept of using the PHA synthase as granule-anchoring molecule for display of proteins of interest was established by the functional display of the ß- galactosidase at PHA granules. This “proof of concept” was followed by the display of biotechnologically more interesting proteins. The IgG binding domain of protein A as well as streptavidin, which is known for its biotin binding ability, were fused to the PHA synthase, respectively, and therefore localised at the PHA granule surfaces during PHA granule assembly, resulting in functional bio-protein A -beads and bio-streptavidin-beads. Moreover, their applicability in biotechnological assays was demonstrated. Recently, we fused the green fluorescent protein (GFP) to the PHA synthase and demonstrated that the PHA granule assembly does not start randomly distributed in the cytoplasm but occurred localised at or near the cell poles. To further investigate if the localisation of the PHA granule formation process is due to polar positional information inherent to the PHA synthase, different mutated versions of the PHA synthase of Cupriavidus necator were created and analysed for a potential alteration in localisation. Furthermore, the phasin protein PhaP1 of C. necator was fused to HcRed, a far-red fluorescent protein, and localisation studies were accomplished when the fusion protein was expressed under different conditions in Escherichia coli.
417

Examination of Cellulolytic activity in Activated sludge, Leading to Elucidation of the Role of �-1,4-endoglucanase enzyme in Aeromonas sp.YS3

Clinton, Brook, brook.clinton@csiro.au January 2007 (has links)
The initial aim of this project was to uncover novel cellulolytic organisms or enzymes from the diverse microbial source, activated sludge. Two isolation methods were used; either directly inoculating the sludge material onto filter paper as a carbon source, or using the Evolver� technology as an enrichment device. In both cases, as expected, cellulase activity was evident, however attributing this activity to one species was difficult in either case. This highlighted the complex interrelationships that existed between the many microorganisms present as the cellulosic carbon sources were degraded. In one instance, a Cellvibrio sp. was isolated. This genus of bacteria is known to possess both types of cellulase activity (exo- and endo- acting) and was therefore likely to contribute to the degradation of the cellulose. However, the isolate, once purified, did not display significant cellulolytic ability as compared to the unpurified consortium of microorganisms. Therefore, in each case, microorganisms responsible for the cellulolytic activity were not uncovered. It was suspected that the microorganisms responsible for some of the cellulolytic activity were protists. During the isolation of microorganisms, an Aeromonas sp. bearing the novel phenotype (for this genus) of CMCase activity was isolated. This activity was at first suspected to contribute to the degradation of the filter paper that was seen during isolation. However, tests with the pure isolate suggested that the Aeromonas sp. CMCase was not used for cellulose catabolism. Ironically, the enzyme may instead function in the production of a cellulose-like exopolysaccharide by the bacterium. Part of a cellulose synthase operon was found in the genome of the Aeromonas sp. isolate, including a gene coding for an endoglucanase that gives a predicted molecular weight enzyme similar to the 39 kDa CMCase purified from the bacterium. The CMCase enzyme, operating as part of of a synthetic operon is expected to be important in terms of the biofilm forming ability of this Aeromonas strain. Such capabilities of the bacterium were investigated here, including observing motility behaviour of the organism on agar surfaces. Studying the biofilm forming ability of this genus in general will be important in understanding how the fish and human pathogens persist in aquatic environments
418

Suprachiasmatic nucleus projecting retinal ganglion cells in golden hamsters development, morphology and relationship with NOS expressing amacrine cells

Chen, Baiyu. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hong Kong, 2006. / Title proper from title frame. Also available in printed format.
419

Investigation of genes and organisms associated with reductive acetogenesis in the rumen and forestomach of a native Australian marsupial

Emma Gagen Unknown Date (has links)
Reductive acetogenesis via the acetyl-CoA pathway is a hydrogenotrophic pathway that has the potential to reduce methanogenesis from ruminant livestock. However our understanding of the organisms capable of this transformation (acetogens) is hindered by a lack of specific molecular tools for this group. In the present thesis, a PCR primer set specific for a wide range of acetogens was developed, targeting the acetyl-CoA synthase (ACS) gene which is unique to the acetyl-CoA pathway. ACS was found to be useful marker for potential acetogens and ACS sequences could be used to infer family-level phylogeny for many acetogens. ACS gene specific primers were used in combination with existing molecular tools targeting the gene encoding formyltetrahydrofolate synthetase (FTHFS, present in the acetyl-CoA pathway but not unique to it) and 16S rRNA genes, as well as cultivation techniques, to investigate acetogen diversity in the rumen and two analogous gut systems where microbial hydrogenotrophy differs: the forestomach of a native Australian marsupial, the tammar wallaby Macropus eugenii; and the developing rumen of young lambs. Novel potential acetogens present naturally in the rumen of pasture fed and grain fed cattle affiliated with the Ruminococcaceae/Blautia group and distantly with the Lachnospiraceae. A large diversity of potential acetogens with functional genes affiliating broadly between the Lachnospiraceae and Clostridiaceae though without a close sequence from a cultured relative were also detected. Rumen acetogen enrichment cultures revealed the presence of a known acetogen, Eubacterium limosum, in grain fed cattle, as well as novel acetogens affiliating with the Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcaceae/Blautia group. The novel potential acetogen population detected in this study may represent an important hydrogenotrophic group in the rumen that we understand very little about and that requires further investigation. The tammar wallaby, which exhibits foregut fermentation analogous to that of the rumen but resulting in lower methane emissions, housed a different acetogen population to that of the bovine rumen (LIBSHUFF, p <0.0001) though novel potential acetogens in the tammar wallaby forestomach affiliated broadly in the same family groups (Blautia group, Lachnospiraceae and between Lachnospiraceae and Clostridiaceae without a close cultured isolate). Acetogen enrichment cultures from the tammar wallaby forestomach facilitated isolation of a novel acetogen, which was closely related to potent reductive acetogens from kangaroos. The differences between the acetogen population of the tammar wallaby forestomach and the bovine rumen may be a factor in explaining lower methane emissions and methanogen numbers in tammar wallabies relative to ruminants. Using a gnotobiotically reared lamb model, the unique acetogen population present in the developing rumen was identified and it’s response to methanogen colonisation examined. The acetogen E. limosum and potential acetogen Ruminococcus obeum were identified as well as a small diversity of novel potential acetogens affiliating with the Blautia group and the Lachnospiraceae. A small but diverse population of naturally resident methanogens were also identified in gnotobiotically reared lambs that had been isolated at 17 hours of age. After inoculation with Methanobrevibacter sp. 87.7, methanogen numbers in gnotobiotically reared lambs significantly increased but acetogen diversity was not altered, indicating that this population is resilient to methanogen colonisation to some degree. The potential acetogen population in gnotobiotically reared lambs was significantly different (LIBSHUFF, p < 0.0001) to that in conventionally reared sheep, which indicates that factors other than methanogen establishment alone, probably relating to other microbes and associated hydrogen concentrations in the rumen, affect acetogens during rumen development.
420

Etude exploratoire de la synthèse des galactolipides chez Plasmodium falciparum

Saidani, Nadia 05 September 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Les plastes sont des organites semi-autonomes qui dérivent d'un événement unique d'endosymbiose entre une cyanobactérie et une cellule eucaryote ancestrale. Le plaste le mieux caractérisé est le chloroplaste des cellules de plantes et d'algues vertes. À la différence des systèmes membranaires eucaryotes qui sont en général riches en phospholipides, les membranes des plastes végétaux se composent à plus de 70% de galactoglycérolipides (monogalactosyldiacylglycérol, MGDG ; digalactosyldiacylglycérol, DGDG). Leur synthèse est assurée par des galactosyltransférases, les MGDG synthases (EC 2.4.1.46) et les DGDG synthases (EC 2.4.1.241) localisées dans les membranes de l'enveloppe qui limitent l'organite. Chez les plantes, les galactolipides sont essentiels pour la biogenèse des plastes mais aussi à la synthèse de membranes extraplastidiales sous certaines conditions physiologiques telles qu'en carence de phosphate.La plupart des parasites Apicomplexes (protozoaires parasites à mode de vie intracellulaire) possèdent une structure plastidiale, non photosynthétique, contenant un ADN circulaire. Cet organite, baptisé apicoplaste, a pour origine phylogénétique une endosymbiose secondaire entre deux eucaryotes, avec ingestion d'une algue rouge unicellulaire par un protozoaire ancestral, suivie d'une disparition de la plupart des structures subcellulaires de l'algue. Des protéines codées par des gènes nucléaires sont importées dans l'apicoplaste et impliquées dans des voies métaboliques typiques des plantes telles que la biosynthèse d'acides gras par le système FASII.Des lipides aux propriétés chromatographiques proches de celles du MGDG et du DGDG ont pu être détectés dans des extraits de Plasmodium falciparum et Toxoplasma gondii, suggérant l'existence d'une voie de biosynthèse des galactolipides comparable à celle existant dans le chloroplaste. Au moyen d'une série d'anticorps dirigés contre le DGDG, un premier objectif de ce travail de thèse a été de caractériser la localisation d'un épitope de structure proche du digalactolipide chloroplastique (DGLE pour digalactolipid-like epitope) chez P. falciparum et déterminer l'évolution de la distribution subcellulaire de cet épitope au cours du cycle cellulaire du parasite. Ces études suggèrent qu'un lipide de structure proche du DGDG est associé à des systèmes membranaires en périphérie de la cellule, en particulier le complexe membranaire interne. Des parasites transgéniques exprimant une MGDG synthase exogène de plante ont été générés. L'accumulation remarquable à la fois de MGDG et de DGDG chez ces transformants démontre d'une part que l'enzyme de plante est fonctionnelle, catalysant la synthèse de MGDG, et d'autre part qu'une glycosyltransférase de P. falciparum est capable ensuite de catalyser de grandes quantités de DGDG. Le rôle possible de cette glycosyltransférase dans la synthèse du DGDG reste à établir. Un second objectif de cette thèse était d'évaluer le potentiel dans P. falciparum de composés inhibant la synthèse des galactolipides de plante dans une visée thérapeutique. Un criblage à haut débit robotisé d'une banque de 24.000 molécules nous a permis d'identifier des inhibiteurs de la MGDG synthase 1 d'Arabidopsis thaliana, parmi lesquels deux composés présentent un effet inhibiteur mesuré par une CI50 de l'ordre 10 µM sur l'activité MGDG synthase. Nous avons pu caractériser l'effet de ces molécules comme compétiteurs de la fixation du diacylglycérol. Une activité inhibitrice de la prolifération de P. falciparum a pu être mesurée in vitro bien qu'aucune enzyme homologue à la MGDG synthase n'ait pu être identifiée in silico sur les banques de données relatives aux Apicomplexes. Une diversification de la structure du châssis moléculaire a été conduite afin d'améliorer 1) l'effet herbicide et 2) l'inhibition de la croissance des parasites et de développer ainsi de nouvelles molécules antipaludiques, qui puissent être qualifiées de médicaments herbicides. L'étude de 250 analogues a permis de progresser de façon substantielle dans le sens d'une meilleure sélectivité avec des composés actifs à 200 nM.Il n'est pas exclu que les molécules sélectionnées pour leur capacité à inhiber une activité MGDG synthase exercent, chez P. falciparum, un effet sur une autre cible. Nous avons conduit une expérience visant à isoler la(les) protéine(s) cible(s) des molécules bioactives par chromatographie d'affinité, puis identifié ces protéines après digestion trypsique par spectrométrie de masse. Une perspective de ce travail consiste à caractériser certaines de ces cibles candidates.Le développement de candidats-médicaments est un processus long selon le schéma classique, depuis la validation d'une cible jusqu'aux essais cliniques. La nouvelle classe de compétiteurs du diacylglycérol caractérisée dans ce travail de thèse présente des propriétés intéressantes dans une visée thérapeutique, qu'il sera important d'optimiser dans l'avenir.

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