Poisoning with organophosphorus compounds, which can lead to a cholinergic crisis due to the inhibition of acetylcholinesterase and the subsequent accumulation of acetylcholine (ACh) in the synaptic cleft, is a serious problem for which treatment options are currently insufficient. Our approach to broadening the therapeutic spectrum is to use agents that interact directly with desensitized nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) in order to induce functional recovery after ACh overstimulation. Although MB327, one of the most prominent compounds investigated in this context, has already shown positive properties in terms of muscle force recovery, this compound is not suitable for use as a therapeutic agent due to its insufficient potency. By means of in silico studies based on our recently presented allosteric binding pocket at the nAChR, i.e. the MB327-PAM-1 binding site, three promising MB327 analogs with a 4-aminopyridinium ion partial structure (PTM0056, PTM0062, and PTM0063) were identified. In this study, we present the synthesis and biological evaluation of a series of new analogs of the aforementioned compounds with a 4-aminopyridinium ion partial structure (PTM0064-PTM0072), as well as hydroxy-substituted analogs of MB327 (PTMD90-0012 and PTMD90-0015) designed to substitute entropically unfavorable water clusters identified during molecular dynamics simulations. The compounds were characterized in terms of their binding affinity towards the aforementioned binding site by applying the UNC0642 MS Binding Assays and in terms of their muscle force reactivation in rat diaphragm myography. More potent compounds were identified compared to MB327, as some of them showed a higher affinity towards MB327-PAM-1 and also a higher recovery of neuromuscular transmission at lower compound concentrations. To improve the treatment of organophosphate poisoning, direct targeting of nAChRs with appropriate compounds is a key step, and this study is an important contribution to this research.
Ectoine and its derivative hydroxyectoine are widely synthesized or imported by bacteria to fend off the detrimental effects of high osmolarity on cellular hydration and growth. Genes that are connected to a particular physiological process are often found in the same genomic context. We exploited this feature in a comprehensive bioinformatical analysis of 1103 ectoine biosynthetic gene clusters from Bacteria and Archaea through which we identified 415 ect operons that colocalize with genes encoding potential osmolyte transporters. These belong to various importer families. Focusing on the complex ect gene clusters of the alpha-proteobacteria Hyphomonas neptunium and Novoshingobium sp. LH128, we analysed several transporters with respect to their substrate specificities through physiological, molecular and modelling approaches. Accordingly, we identified an MFS-type uptake system specific for ectoines (EctU) and a novel SSS-type ectoine/hydroxyectoine importer (EctI) with a broader substrate profile for osmostress protectants. Furthermore, some ect gene clusters encode a MscS/YbdG-type mechanosensitive channel protein, whose functionality was assessed through down-shock assays. Moreover, our analysis identified the gene for the first putative ectoine/hydroxyectoine-specific efflux system (EctX), a member of the MFS superfamily. Our findings make substantial contributions to the understanding of the ecophysiology of ectoines, key players in microbial osmostress adjustment systems.
Background The membrane bound G-protein coupled bile acid receptor TGR5 is expressed in liver epithelial cells. Its activation through bile acids (BAs) triggers secretion, proliferation and anti-apoptotic effects in normal cholangiocytes and CCA cell lines. TGR5 was found to be overexpressed in human cholangiocarcinoma tissue (CCA) and cell lines generated from CCAs. Especially secondary bile acids play a role in the development of different malignant tumors in the gastrointestinal tract, including liver. Whether TGR5 activation also promotes invasiveness and metastasis development of CCA is unclear and aim of this work. Furthermore, TGR5 and the bile acid receptor S1PR2 show partly overlapping signalling functions in biliary epithelial cells. To date, it is unclear whether there is a potential crosstalk of both receptors.
Abstract Intoxications with organophosphorus compounds (OPCs) based chemical warfare agents and insecticides may result in a detrimental overstimulation of muscarinic and nicotinic acetylcholine receptors evolving into a cholinergic crisis leading to death due to respiratory failure. In the case of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR), overstimulation leads to a desensitization of the receptor, which cannot be pharmacologically treated so far. Still, compounds interacting with the MB327 binding site of the nAChR like the bispyridinium salt MB327 have been found to re-establish the functional activity of the desensitized receptor. Only recently, a series of quinazoline derivatives with UNC0642 as one of the most prominent representatives has been identified to address the MB327 binding site of the nAChR as well. In the present study, MS Binding Assays utilizing UNC0642 as a reporter ligand have been established. Thus, the binding of UNC0642 towards Torpedo -nAChR has been characterized in MS saturation and competition experiments. According to the results, UNC0642 addresses the MB327 binding site of the Torpedo -nAChR. This conclusion is further supported by the outcome of ex vivo studies performed with poisoned rat diaphragm muscles as well as by in silico studies predicting the binding mode of the most affine analog UNC0646 in the recently proposed binding site of MB327 (MB327-PAM-1). The new MS Binding Assays based on the commercially available reporter ligand UNC0642 as one of the most affine ligands for the MB327 binding site are a potent and valuable alternative to established assays.
The chromatophores in Paulinella are evolutionary-early-stage photosynthetic organelles. Biological processes in chromatophores depend on a combination of chromatophore and nucleus-encoded proteins. Interestingly, besides proteins carrying chromatophore-targeting signals, a large arsenal of short chromatophore-targeted proteins (sCTPs; <90 amino acids) without recognizable targeting signals were found in chromatophores. This situation resembles endosymbionts in plants and insects that are manipulated by host-derived antimicrobial peptides. Previously, we identified an expanded family of sCTPs of unknown function, named here "DNA-binding (DB)-sCTPs". DB-sCTPs contain a ~45 amino acid motif that is conserved in some bacterial proteins with predicted functions in DNA processing. Here, we explored antimicrobial activity, DNA-binding capacity, and structures of three purified recombinant DB-sCTPs. All three proteins exhibited antimicrobial activity against bacteria involving membrane permeabilization, and bound to bacterial lipids in vitro. A combination of in vitro assays demonstrated binding of recombinant DB-sCTPs to chromatophore-derived genomic DNA sequences with an affinity in the low nM range. Additionally, we report the 1.2 Å crystal structure of one DB-sCTP. In silico docking studies suggest that helix α2 inserts into the DNA major grove and the exposed residues, that are highly variable between different DB-sCTPs, confer interaction with the DNA bases. Identification of photosystem II subunit CP43 as a potential interaction partner of one DB-sCTP, suggests DB-sCTPs to be involved in more complex regulatory mechanisms. We hypothesize that membrane binding of DB-sCTPs is related to their import into chromatophores. Once inside, they interact with the chromatophore genome potentially providing nuclear control over genetic information processing.
<p>The glycoslated macrocyclic antibiotic fidaxomicin (1, tiacumicin B, lipiarmycin A3) displays good to excellent activity against Gram-positive bacteria and was approved for the treatment of Clostridium difficile infections (CDI). Main limitations of the compound include low water solubility, which impacts further clinical use. We report on the synthesis of new fidaxomicin derivatives based on structural design and utilizing an operationally simple one-step protecting group-free preparative approach from the natural product. An increase in solubility of up to 25-fold with largely retained activity was observed. Furthermore, hybrid antibiotics were prepared that show improved antibiotic activities</p>
Ochratoxin A (OTA) is a toxic secondary metabolite produced by several fungal species of the genus Penicillium and Aspergillus. 2′R-Ochratoxin A (2′R-OTA) is a thermal isomerization product of OTA formed during food processing at high temperatures. Both compounds are detectable in human blood in concentrations between 0.02 and 0.41 µg/L with 2′R-OTA being only detectable in the blood of coffee drinkers. Humans have approximately a fifty-fold higher exposure through food consumption to OTA than to 2′R-OTA. In human blood, however, the differences between the concentrations of the two compounds is, on average, only a factor of two. To understand these unexpectedly high 2′R-OTA concentrations found in human blood, the affinity of this compound to the most abundant protein in human blood the human serum albumin (HSA) was studied and compared to that of OTA, which has a well-known high binding affinity. Using fluorescence spectroscopy, equilibrium dialysis, circular dichroism (CD), high performance affinity chromatography (HPAC), and molecular modelling experiments, the affinities of OTA and 2′R-OTA to HSA were determined and compared with each other. For the affinity of HSA towards OTA, a logK of 7.0⁻7.6 was calculated, while for its thermally produced isomer 2′R-OTA, a lower, but still high, logK of 6.2⁻6.4 was determined. The data of all experiments showed consistently that OTA has a higher affinity to HSA than 2′R-OTA. Thus, differences in the affinity to HSA cannot explain the relatively high levels of 2′R-OTA found in human blood samples.