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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.
1

Designing hypercyclic replicating networks

Wood, Evan A. January 2007 (has links)
In the last 20 years there has been a number of synthetic and natural product based molecular replicators published in the literature. The majority of these systems have focused on the minimal model with only a few examples of cross-catalytic or reciprocal replication. Of the cross-catalytic systems investigated the majority focus around the use of natural products, oligonucleotides, peptides etc. This thesis will investigate the design, synthesis and kinetic analysis of both synthetic minimal and reciprocal replicating systems, and how these two forms of replication interact in a complex hypercyclic network. Chapter 1 introduces key concepts such as molecular recognition, intramolecularity/ enzyme kinetic, bisubstrate systems and the work conducted into replication systems to date. Chapter 2 describes the design, synthesis and kinetic analysis of a reciprocal replicating system, based on Diels-Alder and 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions, before going on to discuss what we have learned and how this system can be improved. Chapter 3 focuses on the design, synthesis and kinetic analysis of a replicating network (minimal and reciprocal replication), based on 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions. Initial individual systems are examined in isolation to determine their behavior and nature. After which the systems are combined to observe how each species interacts in a potential complex hypercyclic network. Chapter 4 investigates the redesign of the replicating network in Chapter 3 in order to overcome the problems identified from its kinetic analysis. Chapter 5 introduces the shift in direction away from kinetically controlled replicating networks towards systems in thermodynamic equilibrium.
2

Fluorogene native chemische Peptidverknüpfung

Petszulat, Henrik 06 July 2021 (has links)
In dieser Arbeit wurde eine neue Templat-gesteuerte fluorogene Peptidverknüpfung vorgestellt. Speziell modifizierte Peptidfragmente wurden durch die Bindung an ein Templatmolekül zu einer chemischen Reaktion befähigt, wodurch ein Fluoreszenzsignal erzeugt werden konnte. Das erlaubte eine Reaktionskontrolle in Echtzeit. Die fluorogene Peptidverknüpfung konnte erfolgreich mit einem Coiled-coil Peptid-Model etabliert werden. Dabei wurden Peptidthioester derart modifiziert, dass in räumlicher Nähe zur Thioestergruppe ein Fluorophor platziert wurde und die acetylierte Mercaptogruppe als Fluoreszenzlöscher agierte. Die modifizierten Thioester können nach dem Reaktionsmechanismus der nativen chemischen Peptidverknüpfung (NCL) unter der Bildung einer Amidbindung mit N-terminalen Cysteinylpeptiden reagieren. Die fluoreszenzlöschende Mercaptogruppe verlässt dabei den Peptidthioester als Nukleofug, wodurch ein fluoreszierendes Reaktionsprodukt entsteht. Die Templat-gesteuerte Durchführung dieser fluorogenen nativen chemischen Peptidverknüpfung (fNCL) erlaubte die Reaktionsdurchführung bei sehr geringen Peptidkonzentrationen. Die Synthese der benötigten fluorogenen Thioester gelang zum einem durch die Anwendung der selbstreinigenden Thioestersynthese mit einer Tandem-Entschützungs-Kupplungs-Strategie und zum Anderen mit Hilfe eines synthetisierten fluorogenen Azid-Thioesterbausteins, welches mit einem Alkin-modifizierten Peptid zur Reaktion gebracht wurde. Neben Coiled-coil Peptiden, wurden auch doppelsträngige DNA und Antikörper als Template für die fNCL eingesetzt. Die fNCL konnte zur Durchführung eines Abstandsscreenings angewendet werden. Es wurde eine Abhängigkeit zwischen der Reaktionsgeschwindigkeit und dem Abstand der Bindungsstellen im Templat für zwei reaktive Peptidbindungspartner gezeigt. Durch diese Untersuchung konnte die räumliche Abstandsgrenze zwischen zwei Bindungsstellen in einem Templatmolekül bestimmt werden, die keinen Templat-Effekt mehr beobachten lässt. / In this thesis a new template-controlled fluorogenic peptide linkage was presented. Specially modified peptide fragments were enabled to undergo a chemical reaction by binding to a template molecule, which resulted in a fluorescent signal. This allowed a reaction control in real time. The fluorogenic peptide linkage was successfully established using a coiled coil peptide model. Peptide thioesters were modified in such a way that a fluorophore was placed in close proximity to the thioester group and the acetylated mercapto group acted as fluorescence quencher. These modified thioesters can react with N-terminal cysteinyl peptides according to the reaction mechanism of the native chemical ligation (NCL) under the formation of an petide bond. The fluorescence-quenching mercapto group leaves the peptide thioester as a leaving group, resulting in a fluorescent reaction product. Template-controlled execution of this fluorogenic native chemical ligation (fNCL) allowed the reaction to be performed at very low peptide concentrations. The synthesis of the required fluorogenic thioesters was achieved on the one hand by applying a self-purifying thioester synthesis with a tandem-protective coupling strategy and on the other hand by using a synthesized fluorogenic azide thioester building block which was reacted with an alkine-modified peptide. In addition to the coiled coil peptides, double-stranded DNA and antibodies were used as templates for fNCL. Finally, the fNCL could be used to perform a distance screening. A dependence between the reaction rate and the distance between the binding sites in the template for two reactive peptide binding partners was shown. By this investigation a distance between two binding sites in a template molecule could be determined, which does not show a template effect anymore.

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