Co-reporter:
Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry 2017 Volume 55(Issue 4) pp:297-303
Publication Date(Web):2017/04/01
DOI:10.1002/mrc.4526
AbstractThe 1H and 13C NMR spectra of 17-α-ethinylestradiol (EE2), a well-known contraceptive, including diastereotopic methylene groups, were fully assigned with the help of residual dipolar couplings (RDC) measured in the recently developed grafted graphene oxide orienting medium. RDC analysis, which included all 1DCH couplings and the long-range 2DCH 1H―C≡13C coupling, also pointed to the presence of a minor conformation arising from pseudo-rotation of the steroid B ring. Saturation-transfer difference (STD) measurements revealed that the most likely interaction between EE2 and orienting medium occurred on the C and D ring. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Co-reporter:Karin Giller;Sabrina Graf;Michele Salvi;Benjamin Schomburg;Gottfried Unden;Stefan Becker;Adam Lange;Christian Griesinger
PNAS 2017 Volume 114 (Issue 12 ) pp:3115-3120
Publication Date(Web):2017-03-21
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1620286114
Bacteria use membrane-integral sensor histidine kinases (HK) to perceive stimuli and transduce signals from the environment
to the cytosol. Information on how the signal is transmitted across the membrane by HKs is still scarce. Combining both liquid-
and solid-state NMR, we demonstrate that structural rearrangements in the extracytoplasmic, citrate-sensing Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS)
domain of HK CitA are identical for the isolated domain in solution and in a longer construct containing the membrane-embedded
HK and lacking only the kinase core. We show that upon citrate binding, the PAS domain contracts, resulting in a shortening
of the C-terminal β-strand. We demonstrate that this contraction of the PAS domain, which is well characterized for the isolated
domain, is the signal transmitted to the transmembrane (TM) helices in a CitA construct in liposomes. Putting the extracytoplasmic
PAS domain into context of the membrane-embedded CitA construct slows down citrate-binding kinetics by at least a factor of
60, confirming that TM helix motions are linked to the citrate-binding event. Our results are confirmation of a hallmark of
the HK signal transduction mechanism with atomic resolution on a full-length construct lacking only the kinase core domain.
Co-reporter:Nilamoni Nath; Manuel Schmidt; Roberto R. Gil; R. Thomas Williamson; Gary E. Martin; Armando Navarro-Vázquez; Christian Griesinger;Yizhou Liu
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2016 Volume 138(Issue 30) pp:9548-9556
Publication Date(Web):June 13, 2016
DOI:10.1021/jacs.6b04082
Determination of relative configuration is frequently a rate-limiting step in the characterization of small organic molecules. Solution NMR-based nuclear Overhauser effect and scalar J-coupling constants can provide useful spatial information but often fail when stereocenters are separated by more than 4–5 Å. Residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) can provide a means of assigning relative configuration without limits of distance between stereocenters. However, sensitivity limits their application. Chemical shift is the most readily measured NMR parameter, and partial molecular alignment can reveal the anisotropic component of the chemical shift tensor, manifested as residual chemical shift anisotropy (RCSA). Hence, 13C RCSAs provide information on the relative orientations of specific structural moieties including nonprotonated carbons and can be used for stereochemical assignment. Herein, we present two robust and sensitive methods to accurately measure and apply 13C RCSAs for stereochemical assignment. The complementary techniques are demonstrated with five molecules representing differing structural classes.
Co-reporter:Supriya Pratihar;Dr. T. Michael Sabo;Dr. David Ban;Dr. R. Bryn Fenwick;Dr. Stefan Becker;Dr. Xavier Salvatella;Dr. Christian Griesinger;Dr. Donghan Lee
Angewandte Chemie 2016 Volume 128( Issue 33) pp:9719-9722
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201603501
Abstract
Protein dynamics occurring on a wide range of timescales play a crucial role in governing protein function. Particularly, motions between the globular rotational correlation time ( ) and 40 μs (supra- window), strongly influence molecular recognition. This supra- window was previously hidden, owing to a lack of experimental methods. Recently, we have developed a high-power relaxation dispersion (RD) experiment for measuring kinetics as fast as 4 μs. For the first time, this method, performed under super-cooled conditions, enabled us to detect a global motion in the first β-turn of the third IgG-binding domain of protein G (GB3), which was extrapolated to 371±115 ns at 310 K. Furthermore, the same residues show the plasticity in the model-free residual dipolar coupling (RDC) order parameters and in an ensemble encoding the supra- dynamics. This β-turn is involved in antibody binding, exhibiting the potential link of the observed supra- motion with molecular recognition.
Co-reporter:Supriya Pratihar;Dr. T. Michael Sabo;Dr. David Ban;Dr. R. Bryn Fenwick;Dr. Stefan Becker;Dr. Xavier Salvatella;Dr. Christian Griesinger;Dr. Donghan Lee
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2016 Volume 55( Issue 33) pp:9567-9570
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201603501
Abstract
Protein dynamics occurring on a wide range of timescales play a crucial role in governing protein function. Particularly, motions between the globular rotational correlation time ( ) and 40 μs (supra- window), strongly influence molecular recognition. This supra- window was previously hidden, owing to a lack of experimental methods. Recently, we have developed a high-power relaxation dispersion (RD) experiment for measuring kinetics as fast as 4 μs. For the first time, this method, performed under super-cooled conditions, enabled us to detect a global motion in the first β-turn of the third IgG-binding domain of protein G (GB3), which was extrapolated to 371±115 ns at 310 K. Furthermore, the same residues show the plasticity in the model-free residual dipolar coupling (RDC) order parameters and in an ensemble encoding the supra- dynamics. This β-turn is involved in antibody binding, exhibiting the potential link of the observed supra- motion with molecular recognition.
Co-reporter:Liang-Yan Liu;Han Sun;Christian Griesinger
Natural Products and Bioprospecting 2016 Volume 6( Issue 1) pp:41-48
Publication Date(Web):2016 February
DOI:10.1007/s13659-015-0084-0
A new alkylpyrrole derivative, fusariumin A (1), was isolated from the culture broth of the fungus Fusarium sp. The absolute configuration of fuasiumin A has been established as (2′R,3′R) using a combination of RDC (residual dipolar coupling)-based NMR and DFT-supported chiroptical spectroscopy. It is worth to note that in this study without the aid of the RDC analysis, an unambiguous determination of configuration and conformation was not feasible due to the excessive conformational possibilities of this open-chain compound.
Co-reporter:Colin A. Smith;David Ban;Supriya Pratihar;Stefan Becker;Donghan Lee;Bert L. de Groot;Karin Giller;Maria Paulat;Christian Griesinger
PNAS 2016 Volume 113 (Issue 12 ) pp:3269-3274
Publication Date(Web):2016-03-22
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1519609113
Many biological processes depend on allosteric communication between different parts of a protein, but the role of internal
protein motion in propagating signals through the structure remains largely unknown. Through an experimental and computational
analysis of the ground state dynamics in ubiquitin, we identify a collective global motion that is specifically linked to
a conformational switch distant from the binding interface. This allosteric coupling is also present in crystal structures
and is found to facilitate multispecificity, particularly binding to the ubiquitin-specific protease (USP) family of deubiquitinases.
The collective motion that enables this allosteric communication does not affect binding through localized changes but, instead,
depends on expansion and contraction of the entire protein domain. The characterization of these collective motions represents
a promising avenue for finding and manipulating allosteric networks.
Co-reporter:Leo E. Wong;Sona Pirkuliyeva;Julius Kühn;Kathrin Schulz;Kevser Gencalp Fünfgeld;Facundo D. Batista;Selina Keppler;Michael Habeck;Henning Urlaub;Claudia Schwiegk;Stefan Becker;Jürgen Wienands;Christian Griesinger
Science Signaling 2016 Volume 9(Issue 434) pp:
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1126/scisignal.aad6275
CIN85 regulates the extent of B cell receptor signaling by controlling clustering of the adaptor protein SLP-65.
Co-reporter:Dr. Colin A. Smith;Dr. David Ban;Supriya Pratihar;Karin Giller;Claudia Schwiegk;Dr. Bert L. deGroot;Dr. Stefan Becker;Dr. Christian Griesinger;Dr. Donghan Lee
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2015 Volume 54( Issue 1) pp:207-210
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201408890
Abstract
Motions play a vital role in the functions of many proteins. Discrete conformational transitions to excited states, happening on timescales of hundreds of microseconds, have been extensively characterized. On the other hand, the dynamics of the ground state are widely unexplored. Newly developed high-power relaxation dispersion experiments allow the detection of motions up to a one-digit microsecond timescale. These experiments showed that side chains in the hydrophobic core as well as at protein–protein interaction surfaces of both ubiquitin and the third immunoglobulin binding domain of protein G move on the microsecond timescale. Both proteins exhibit plasticity to this microsecond motion through redistribution of the populations of their side-chain rotamers, which interconvert on the picosecond to nanosecond timescale, making it likely that this “population shuffling” process is a general mechanism.
Co-reporter:Dr. Jens Pilger;Dr. Adam Mazur;Dr. Peter Monecke;Dr. Herman Schreuder;Dr. Bettina Elshorst;Dr. Stefan Bartoschek;Dr. Thomas Langer;Dr. Alexer Schiffer;Dr. Isabelle Krimm;Melanie Wegstroth;Dr. Donghan Lee;Dr. Gerhard Hessler;Dr. K.-Ulrich Wendt;Dr. Stefan Becker;Dr. Christian Griesinger
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2015 Volume 54( Issue 22) pp:6511-6515
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201500671
Abstract
Structure-based drug design (SBDD) is a powerful and widely used approach to optimize affinity of drug candidates. With the recently introduced INPHARMA method, the binding mode of small molecules to their protein target can be characterized even if no spectroscopic information about the protein is known. Here, we show that the combination of the spin-diffusion-based NMR methods INPHARMA, trNOE, and STD results in an accurate scoring function for docking modes and therefore determination of protein–ligand complex structures. Applications are shown on the model system protein kinase A and the drug targets glycogen phosphorylase and soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH). Multiplexing of several ligands improves the reliability of the scoring function further. The new score allows in the case of sEH detecting two binding modes of the ligand in its binding site, which was corroborated by X-ray analysis.
Co-reporter:Dr. Nilamoni Nath;Dr. Edward J. d'Auvergne ; Christian Griesinger
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2015 Volume 54( Issue 43) pp:12706-12710
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201504432
Abstract
Together with NOE and J coupling, one-bond residual dipolar coupling (RDC), which reports on the three-dimensional orientation of an internuclear vector in the molecular frame, plays an important role in the conformation and configuration analysis of small molecules in solution by NMR spectroscopy. When the molecule has few CH bonds, or too many bonds are in parallel, the available RDCs may not be sufficient to obtain the alignment tensor used for structure elucidation. Long-range RDCs that connect nuclei over multiple bonds are normally not parallel to the single bonds and therefore complement one-bond RDCs. Herein we present a method for extracting the long-range RDC of a chosen proton or group of protons to all remotely connected carbon atoms, including non-protonated carbon atoms. Alignment tensors fitted directly to the total long-range couplings (T=J+D) enabled straightforward analysis of both the long-range and one-bond RDCs for strychnine.
Co-reporter:Dr. Nilamoni Nath;Dr. Edward J. d'Auvergne ; Christian Griesinger
Angewandte Chemie 2015 Volume 127( Issue 43) pp:12897-12901
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201504432
Abstract
Together with NOE and J coupling, one-bond residual dipolar coupling (RDC), which reports on the three-dimensional orientation of an internuclear vector in the molecular frame, plays an important role in the conformation and configuration analysis of small molecules in solution by NMR spectroscopy. When the molecule has few CH bonds, or too many bonds are in parallel, the available RDCs may not be sufficient to obtain the alignment tensor used for structure elucidation. Long-range RDCs that connect nuclei over multiple bonds are normally not parallel to the single bonds and therefore complement one-bond RDCs. Herein we present a method for extracting the long-range RDC of a chosen proton or group of protons to all remotely connected carbon atoms, including non-protonated carbon atoms. Alignment tensors fitted directly to the total long-range couplings (T=J+D) enabled straightforward analysis of both the long-range and one-bond RDCs for strychnine.
Co-reporter:Dr. Colin A. Smith;Dr. David Ban;Supriya Pratihar;Karin Giller;Claudia Schwiegk;Dr. Bert L. deGroot;Dr. Stefan Becker;Dr. Christian Griesinger;Dr. Donghan Lee
Angewandte Chemie 2015 Volume 127( Issue 1) pp:209-212
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201408890
Abstract
Motions play a vital role in the functions of many proteins. Discrete conformational transitions to excited states, happening on timescales of hundreds of microseconds, have been extensively characterized. On the other hand, the dynamics of the ground state are widely unexplored. Newly developed high-power relaxation dispersion experiments allow the detection of motions up to a one-digit microsecond timescale. These experiments showed that side chains in the hydrophobic core as well as at protein–protein interaction surfaces of both ubiquitin and the third immunoglobulin binding domain of protein G move on the microsecond timescale. Both proteins exhibit plasticity to this microsecond motion through redistribution of the populations of their side-chain rotamers, which interconvert on the picosecond to nanosecond timescale, making it likely that this “population shuffling” process is a general mechanism.
Co-reporter:Dr. Jens Pilger;Dr. Adam Mazur;Dr. Peter Monecke;Dr. Herman Schreuder;Dr. Bettina Elshorst;Dr. Stefan Bartoschek;Dr. Thomas Langer;Dr. Alexer Schiffer;Dr. Isabelle Krimm;Melanie Wegstroth;Dr. Donghan Lee;Dr. Gerhard Hessler;Dr. K.-Ulrich Wendt;Dr. Stefan Becker;Dr. Christian Griesinger
Angewandte Chemie 2015 Volume 127( Issue 22) pp:6611-6615
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201500671
Abstract
Structure-based drug design (SBDD) is a powerful and widely used approach to optimize affinity of drug candidates. With the recently introduced INPHARMA method, the binding mode of small molecules to their protein target can be characterized even if no spectroscopic information about the protein is known. Here, we show that the combination of the spin-diffusion-based NMR methods INPHARMA, trNOE, and STD results in an accurate scoring function for docking modes and therefore determination of protein–ligand complex structures. Applications are shown on the model system protein kinase A and the drug targets glycogen phosphorylase and soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH). Multiplexing of several ligands improves the reliability of the scoring function further. The new score allows in the case of sEH detecting two binding modes of the ligand in its binding site, which was corroborated by X-ray analysis.
Co-reporter:T. Masini, J. Pilger, B. S. Kroezen, B. Illarionov, P. Lottmann, M. Fischer, C. Griesinger and A. K. H. Hirsch
Chemical Science 2014 vol. 5(Issue 9) pp:3543-3551
Publication Date(Web):12 Jun 2014
DOI:10.1039/C4SC00588K
We applied for the first time an innovative ligand-based NMR methodology (STI) to a medicinal-chemistry project aimed at the development of inhibitors for the enzyme 1-deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate synthase (DXS). DXS is the first enzyme of the 2C-methyl-D-erythritol-4-phosphate (MEP) pathway, present in most bacteria (and not in humans) and responsible for the synthesis of the essential isoprenoid precursors. We designed de novo a first generation of fragments, using Deinococcus radiodurans DXS as a model enzyme, targeting the thiamine diphosphate (TDP) pocket of DXS whilst also exploring the putative substrate-binding pocket, where selectivity over other human TDP-dependent enzymes could be gained. The STI methodology – suitable for weak binders – was essential to determine the binding mode in solution of one of the fragments, circumventing the requirement for an X-ray co-crystal structure, which is known to be particularly challenging for this specific enzyme and in general for weak binders. Based on this finding, we carried out fragment growing and optimisation, which led to a three-fold more potent fragment, about as potent as the well-established thiamine analogue deazathiamine. The STI methodology proved therefore its strong potential as a tool to support medicinal-chemistry projects in their early stages, especially when dealing with weak binders.
Co-reporter:Luigi Russo ; Mitcheell Maestre-Martinez ; Sebastian Wolff ; Stefan Becker
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2013 Volume 135(Issue 45) pp:17111-17120
Publication Date(Web):October 11, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ja408143f
An ensemble-based approach is presented to explore the conformational space sampled by a multidomain protein showing moderate interdomain dynamics in terms of translational and rotational motions. The strategy was applied on a complex of calmodulin (CaM) with the IQ-recognition motif from the voltage-gated calcium channel Cav1.2 (IQ), which adopts three different interdomain orientations in the crystal. The N60D mutant of calmodulin was used to collect pseudocontact shifts and paramagnetically induced residual dipolar couplings for six different lanthanide ions. Then, starting from the crystal structure, pools of conformations were generated by free MD. We found the three crystal conformations in solution, but four additional MD-derived conformations had to be included into the ensemble to fulfill all the paramagnetic data and cross-validate optimally against unused paramagnetic data. Alternative approaches led to similar ensembles. Our “ensemble” approach is a simple and efficient tool to probe and describe the interdomain dynamics and represents a general method that can be used to provide a proper ensemble description of multidomain proteins.
Co-reporter:Dr. Michael Müller;M.Sc. Claudia M. Orben;Dr. Nina Schützenmeister;Dipl.-Chem. Manuel Schmidt;Dr. Andrei Leonov;Dr. Uwe M. Reinscheid;Dr. Birger Dittrich;Dr. Christian Griesinger
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2013 Volume 52( Issue 23) pp:6047-6049
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201300258
Co-reporter:Jens Wagner;Sergey Ryazanov;Andrei Leonov;Johannes Levin;Song Shi;Gerda Mitteregger-Kretzschmar;Francisco Pan-Montojo;Uwe Bertsch;Felix Schmidt;Catharina Prix;Markus Geissen;Martin Eiden;Fabienne Leidel;Thomas Hirschberger;Andreas A. Deeg;Julian J. Krauth;Wolfgang Zinth;Paul Tavan;Jens Pilger;Markus Zweckstetter;Tobias Frank;Mathias Bähr;Jochen H. Weishaupt;Manfred Uhr;Henning Urlaub;Ulrike Teichmann;Matthias Samwer;Martin Groschup;Kai Bötzel;Hans Kretzschmar;Christian Griesinger;Armin Giese
Acta Neuropathologica 2013 Volume 125( Issue 6) pp:795-813
Publication Date(Web):2013/06/01
DOI:10.1007/s00401-013-1114-9
In neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD), Parkinson’s disease (PD) and prion diseases, deposits of aggregated disease-specific proteins are found. Oligomeric aggregates are presumed to be the key neurotoxic agent. Here we describe the novel oligomer modulator anle138b [3-(1,3-benzodioxol-5-yl)-5-(3-bromophenyl)-1H-pyrazole], an aggregation inhibitor we developed based on a systematic high-throughput screening campaign combined with medicinal chemistry optimization. In vitro, anle138b blocked the formation of pathological aggregates of prion protein (PrPSc) and of α-synuclein (α-syn), which is deposited in PD and other synucleinopathies such as dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and multiple system atrophy (MSA). Notably, anle138b strongly inhibited all prion strains tested including BSE-derived and human prions. Anle138b showed structure-dependent binding to pathological aggregates and strongly inhibited formation of pathological oligomers in vitro and in vivo both for prion protein and α-synuclein. Both in mouse models of prion disease and in three different PD mouse models, anle138b strongly inhibited oligomer accumulation, neuronal degeneration, and disease progression in vivo. Anle138b had no detectable toxicity at therapeutic doses and an excellent oral bioavailability and blood–brain-barrier penetration. Our findings indicate that oligomer modulators provide a new approach for disease-modifying therapy in these diseases, for which only symptomatic treatment is available so far. Moreover, our findings suggest that pathological oligomers in neurodegenerative diseases share structural features, although the main protein component is disease-specific, indicating that compounds such as anle138b that modulate oligomer formation by targeting structure-dependent epitopes can have a broad spectrum of activity in the treatment of different protein aggregation diseases.
Co-reporter:Dr. Nina Schützenmeister;Dr. Michael Müller;Dr. Uwe M. Reinscheid;Dr. Christian Griesinger;Dr. Andrei Leonov
Chemistry - A European Journal 2013 Volume 19( Issue 51) pp:17584-17588
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.201303403
Abstract
Here we report the synthesis of all four stereoisomers of mefloquine. Mefloquine (Lariam) is an important anti-malaria drug that is applied as a racemate of the erythro form. However, the (−)-isomer induces psychosis, while the (+)-enantiomer does not have this undesired side effect. There are six syntheses of which five lead to the wrong enantiomer without the authors of these syntheses noting that they had synthesized the wrong compound. At the same time physical chemistry investigations had assigned the absolute configuration correctly and the last enantioselective synthesis that took these results into account delivered the correct absolute configuration. Since various synthetic approaches failed to provide the correct stereoisomers in previous syntheses, we submit here a synthetic approach with a domino Sonogashira-6π-electrocyclisation as key step that confirmed synthetically the correct absolute configuration of all four isomers.
Co-reporter:Manuel Schmidt;Han Sun;Andrei Leonov;Christian Griesinger;Uwe M. Reinscheid
Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry 2012 Volume 50( Issue Supplement S1) pp:S38-S44
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/mrc.3886
A new chiral alignment medium for dimethyl sulfoxide, methanol, and water as solvents was developed. Because both enantiomers of the gel are available, it is possible to enantiodiscriminate natural products such as strychnine HCl that naturally occurs as single enantiomer. With the two methods of achieving anisotropy, namely stretching and confinement, the degree of alignment can be adjusted, and the director changed from horizontal to vertical. This increases the applicability. Three compounds were enantiodiscriminated on the basis of residual dipolar coupling data: mefloquine HCl, strychnine HCl, and menthylamine HCl. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Co-reporter:Dr. Hui Ming Ge;Han Sun;Dr. Nan Jiang;Yan Hua Qin;Huan Dou;Tong Yan; Ya Yi Hou; Christian Griesinger; Ren Xiang Tan
Chemistry - A European Journal 2012 Volume 18( Issue 17) pp:5213-5221
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.201104078
Abstract
Bioactive natural products offer multiple opportunities for the discovery of novel chemical entities with potential pharmaceutical, nutraceutical and agrochemical applications. Many new organic compounds with novel scaffolds are isolated in small quantities and established methods often fail to determine the structure and bioactivity of such novel natural products. To meet this challenge, we present here a new methodology combining RDC (residual dipolar coupling)-based NMR spectroscopy in microtubes, with a motif-inspired biological assessment strategy. Using only one milligram (ca. 1.5 μmol) of sample, the new protocol established the bioactivity as well as the relative and absolute configuration of vatiparol obtained from Vatica parvifolia. Vatiparol is unique in its unprecedented carbon skeleton and selective inhibitory effect on the expression of monocyte chemo-attractant protein-1 (MCP-1, also known as CCL2). The plausible biosynthetic pathway of vatiparol is briefly discussed. The approach introduced here promises to be widely applicable to the determination of the structure and bioactivity of structurally unknown organic samples available in very limited amounts.
Co-reporter:Dr. Robert Berger;Dr. Jacques Courtieu;Dr. Roberto R. Gil;Dr. Christian Griesinger;Dr. Matthias Köck;Dr. Philippe Lesot;Dr. Burkhard Luy;Dr. Denis Merlet;Dr. Armo Navarro-Vázquez;Dr. Michael Reggelin;Dr. Uwe M. Reinscheid;Dr. Christina M. Thiele;Dr. Markus Zweckstetter
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2012 Volume 51( Issue 33) pp:8388-8391
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201107626
Co-reporter:Dr. Robert Berger;Dr. Jacques Courtieu;Dr. Roberto R. Gil;Dr. Christian Griesinger;Dr. Matthias Köck;Dr. Philippe Lesot;Dr. Burkhard Luy;Dr. Denis Merlet;Dr. Armo Navarro-Vázquez;Dr. Michael Reggelin;Dr. Uwe M. Reinscheid;Dr. Christina M. Thiele;Dr. Markus Zweckstetter
Angewandte Chemie 2012 Volume 124( Issue 33) pp:8512-8515
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201107626
Co-reporter:Dr. Valerie S. Honndorf;Dr. Nicolas Coudevylle;Dr. Stefan Laufer;Dr. Stefan Becker;Dr. Christian Griesinger;Dr. Michael Habeck
Angewandte Chemie 2012 Volume 124( Issue 10) pp:2409-2412
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201105241
Co-reporter:Dr. Valerie S. Honndorf;Dr. Nicolas Coudevylle;Dr. Stefan Laufer;Dr. Stefan Becker;Dr. Christian Griesinger;Dr. Michael Habeck
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2012 Volume 51( Issue 10) pp:2359-2362
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201105241
Co-reporter:David Ban, Alvar D. Gossert, Karin Giller, Stefan Becker, Christian Griesinger, Donghan Lee
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2012 221() pp: 1-4
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2012.05.005
Co-reporter:Eibe B. Dücker, Lars T. Kuhn, Kerstin Münnemann, Christian Griesinger
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2012 214() pp: 159-165
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2011.11.001
Co-reporter:R. Bryn Fenwick ; Santi Esteban-Martín ; Barbara Richter ; Donghan Lee ; Korvin F. A. Walter ; Dragomir Milovanovic ; Stefan Becker ; Nils A. Lakomek ; Christian Griesinger ;Xavier Salvatella
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2011 Volume 133(Issue 27) pp:10336-10339
Publication Date(Web):June 2, 2011
DOI:10.1021/ja200461n
Long-range correlated motions in proteins are candidate mechanisms for processes that require information transfer across protein structures, such as allostery and signal transduction. However, the observation of backbone correlations between distant residues has remained elusive, and only local correlations have been revealed using residual dipolar couplings measured by NMR spectroscopy. In this work, we experimentally identified and characterized collective motions spanning four β-strands separated by up to 15 Å in ubiquitin. The observed correlations link molecular recognition sites and result from concerted conformational changes that are in part mediated by the hydrogen-bonding network.
Co-reporter:Han Sun ; Uwe M. Reinscheid ; Emily L. Whitson ; Edward J. d’Auvergne ; Chris M. Ireland ; Armando Navarro-Vázquez
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2011 Volume 133(Issue 37) pp:14629-14636
Publication Date(Web):July 21, 2011
DOI:10.1021/ja205295q
Fibrosterol sulfate A is a polysulfated bis-steroid with an atypical side chain. Due to the flexibility of the linker, large-scale motions that change dramatically the shape of the entire molecule are expected. Such motions pose major challenges to the structure elucidation and the correct determination of configuration. In this study, we will describe the determination of the relative configuration of fibrosterol sulfate A through a residual dipolar coupling based multiple alignment tensor analysis complemented by molecular dynamics. For completeness, we applied also the single tensor approach which is unreliable due to the large-scale motions and compare the results.
Co-reporter:Manuel Schmidt ; Han Sun ; Per Rogne ; Gerhard K. E. Scriba ; Christian Griesinger ; Lars T. Kuhn ;Uwe M. Reinscheid
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2011 Volume 134(Issue 6) pp:3080-3083
Publication Date(Web):December 7, 2011
DOI:10.1021/ja209050k
Even though the important antimalaria drug rac-erythro-mefloquine HCl has been on the market as Lariam for decades, the absolute configurations of its enantiomers have not been determined conclusively. This is needed, since the (−) enantiomer is believed to cause adverse side effects in malaria treatment resulting from binding to the adenosine receptor in the human brain. Since there are conflicting assignments based on enantioselective synthesis and anomalous X-ray diffraction, we determined the absolute configuration using a combination of NMR, optical rotatory dispersion (ORD), and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy together with density functional theory calculations. First, structural models of erythro-mefloquine HCl compatible with NMR-derived 3JHH scalar couplings, 15N chemical shifts, rotational Overhauser effects, and residual dipolar couplings were constructed. Second, we calculated ORD and CD spectra of the structural models and compared the calculated data with the experimental values. The experimental results for (−)-erythro-mefloquine HCl matched our calculated chiroptical data for the 11R,12S model. Accordingly, we conclude that the assignment of 11R,12S to (−)-erythro-mefloquine HCl is correct.
Co-reporter:David Ban;Michael Funk;Rudolf Gulich;Dalia Egger;Dr. T. Michael Sabo;Korvin F. A. Walter;R. Bryn Fenwick;Karin Giller;Dr. Fabio Pichierri;Dr. Bert L. deGroot;Oliver F. Lange;Dr. Helmut Grubmüller;Dr. Xavier Salvatella;Martin Wolf;Dr. Alois Loidl;Dr. Reiner Kree;Stefan Becker;Dr. Nils-Alexer Lakomek;Dr. Donghan Lee;Dr. Peter Lunkenheimer;Dr. Christian Griesinger
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2011 Volume 50( Issue 48) pp:11437-11440
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201105086
Co-reporter:Dr. Máté Erdélyi;Dr. Edward d'Auvergne;Dr. Armo Navarro-Vázquez;Dr. Andrei Leonov; Christian Griesinger
Chemistry - A European Journal 2011 Volume 17( Issue 34) pp:9368-9376
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.201100854
Abstract
The dynamics of the glycosidic bond of lactose was studied by a paramagnetic tagging-based NMR technique, which allowed the collection of an unusually large series of NMR data for a single compound. By the use of distance- and orientation-dependent residual dipolar couplings and pseudocontact shifts, the simultaneous fitting of the probabilities of computed conformations and the orientation of the magnetic susceptibility tensor of a series of lanthanide complexes of lactose show that its glycosidic bond samples syn/syn, anti/syn and syn/anti ϕ/ψ regions of the conformational space in water. The analysis indicates a higher reliability of pseudocontact shift data as compared to residual dipolar couplings with the presently available weakly orienting paramagnetic tagging technique. The method presented herein allows for an improved understanding of the dynamic behaviour of oligosaccharides.
Co-reporter:Sayoko Yamamoto;Dr. Takumi Yamaguchi;Dr. Máté Erdélyi; Christian Griesinger; Koichi Kato
Chemistry - A European Journal 2011 Volume 17( Issue 34) pp:9280-9282
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.201100856
Co-reporter:Han Sun;Dr. Edward J. d'Auvergne;Dr. Uwe M. Reinscheid; Luiz CarlosDias; Carlos KleberZ.Andrade; Rafael OliveiraRocha; Christian Griesinger
Chemistry - A European Journal 2011 Volume 17( Issue 6) pp:1811-1817
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.201002520
Abstract
The absolute configuration of small crystallizable molecules can be determined with anomalous X-ray diffraction as shown by Bijvoet in 1951. For the majority of compounds that can neither be crystallized nor easily be converted into crystallizable derivatives, stereocontrolled organic synthesis is still required to establish their absolute configuration. In this contribution, a new fundamental methodology for resolving the absolute configuration will be presented that does not require crystallization. With residual dipolar coupling enhanced NMR spectroscopy, ensembles of a limited number of structures are created reflecting the correct conformations and relative configuration. Subsequently, from these ensembles, optical rotation dispersion (ORD) spectra are predicted by DFT calculations and compared to experimental results. The combination of these two steps reveals the absolute configuration of a flexible molecule in solution, which is a big challenge to chiroptical methods and DFT in the absence of NMR spectroscopy. Here the absolute stereochemistry of the product of a new Michael addition, synthesized via a niobium(V) chiral enolate, will be elucidated by using the new methodology.
Co-reporter:Dr. Ferno Hallwass;Manuel Schmidt;Han Sun;Dr. Adam Mazur;Dr. Grit Kummerlöwe;Dr. Burkhard Luy;Dr. Armo Navarro-Vázquez;Dr. Christian Griesinger;Dr. Uwe M. Reinscheid
Angewandte Chemie 2011 Volume 123( Issue 40) pp:9659-9662
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201101784
Co-reporter:Dr. Ferno Hallwass;Manuel Schmidt;Han Sun;Dr. Adam Mazur;Dr. Grit Kummerlöwe;Dr. Burkhard Luy;Dr. Armo Navarro-Vázquez;Dr. Christian Griesinger;Dr. Uwe M. Reinscheid
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2011 Volume 50( Issue 40) pp:9487-9490
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201101784
Co-reporter:Alexander Krahn, Philip Lottmann, Thorsten Marquardsen, Andreas Tavernier, Maria-Teresa Türke, Marcel Reese, Andrei Leonov, Marina Bennati, Peter Hoefer, Frank Engelke and Christian Griesinger
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2010 vol. 12(Issue 22) pp:5830-5840
Publication Date(Web):11 May 2010
DOI:10.1039/C003381B
A DNP set-up is described where a liquid sample is hyperpolarized by the electron-nucleus Overhauser effect in a field of 0.34 T and transferred to a field of 14.09 T for NMR detection. In contrast to a previous set-up, using two dedicated magnets for polarization and detection, a dedicated ferroshim system was inserted into the bore of a 14.09 T shielded cryomagnet to provide a homogeneous low-field region in the stray field above the magnetic center. After polarization in the low-field the sample is transferred to the high-field magnetic center within 40 ms by a pneumatic shuttle system. In our set-up a standard high-resolution inverse 1H/13C selective probe was used for NMR detection and a homebuilt EPR cavity, operating in the TM110 mode was used for polarisation. First experimental data are presented. We observed a maximum proton Overhauser enhancement of up to εHF = −3.7 in the high-field position for a 5 mM 4-Oxo-TEMPO-D,15N (TEMPONE)/H2O sample. While this reproduces the DNP enhancement observed also in the old set-up, with the new set-up we observe enhancement on larger molecules that were impossible to enhance in the old set-up. Therefore, we can demonstrate for the first time Overhauser enhanced high resolution proton spectra of glucose and 2,2-dimethyl-2-silapentane-5-sulfonic acid sodium salt (DSS) in D2O, where the high resolution spectrum was acquired in the high-field position after polarizing the sample in the low-field.
Co-reporter:Uwe M. Reinscheid;Matthias Köck;Christine Cychon;Volker Schmidts;Christina M. Thiele;Christian Griesinger
European Journal of Organic Chemistry 2010 Volume 2010( Issue 36) pp:6900-6903
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ejoc.201001392
Abstract
We determined the ensemble of conformations and therelative configuration of dibromopalau'amine by using NMR parameters such as 3J couplings, ROEs and residual dipolar couplings. Based on the ensemble electronic circular dichroism (ECD) and optical rotatory dispersion (ORD) spectra were calculated using DFT and compared to experiment. By this method the absolute configuration of natural (–)-dibromopalau'amine was determined as 6S,10R,11S,12S,16R,17S,18S,20S.
Co-reporter:Dr. Ashutosh Kumar; Henrike Heise;Dr. Marcel J. J. Blommers;Dr. Philipp Krastel;Dr. Esther Schmitt;Dr. Frank Petersen;Dr. Siva Jeganathan;Dr. Eva-Maria Melkow;Dr. Teresa Carlomagno; Christian Griesinger; Marc Baldus
Angewandte Chemie 2010 Volume 122( Issue 41) pp:7666-7669
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201001946
Co-reporter:Dr. Ashutosh Kumar; Henrike Heise;Dr. Marcel J. J. Blommers;Dr. Philipp Krastel;Dr. Esther Schmitt;Dr. Frank Petersen;Dr. Siva Jeganathan;Dr. Eva-Maria Melkow;Dr. Teresa Carlomagno; Christian Griesinger; Marc Baldus
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2010 Volume 49( Issue 41) pp:7504-7507
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201001946
Co-reporter:Sebastian Himmel;Sebastian Wolff;Dr. Stefan Becker;Dr. Donghan Lee;Dr. Christian Griesinger
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2010 Volume 49( Issue 47) pp:8971-8974
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201003965
Co-reporter:Marcel Reese ; Maria-Teresa Türke ; Igor Tkach ; Giacomo Parigi ; Claudio Luchinat ; Thorsten Marquardsen ; Andreas Tavernier ; Peter Höfer ; Frank Engelke ; Christian Griesinger ;Marina Bennati
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2009 Volume 131(Issue 42) pp:15086-15087
Publication Date(Web):October 5, 2009
DOI:10.1021/ja905959n
Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) permits increasing the NMR signal of nuclei by pumping the electronic spin transitions of paramagnetic centers nearby. This method is emerging as a powerful tool to increase the inherent sensitivity of NMR in structural biology aiming at detection of macromolecules. In aqueous solution, additional technical issues associated with the penetration of microwaves in water and heating effects aggravate the performance of the experiment. To examine the feasibility of low-field (9.7 GHz/0.35 T) DNP in high resolution NMR, we have constructed the prototype of a two-field shuttle DNP spectrometer that polarizes nuclei at 9.7 GHz/0.35 T and detects the NMR spectrum at 14 T. We report our first 1H and 13C DNP enhancements with this spectrometer. Effective enhancements up to 15 were observed for small molecules at 1H 600 MHz/14 T as compared to the Boltzmann signal. The results provide a proof of principle for the feasibility of a shuttle DNP experiment and open up perspectives for the application potential of this method in solution NMR.
Co-reporter:Julien Orts;Jennifer Tuma Dr.;Marcel Reese;S.Kaspar Grimm Dr.;Peter Monecke Dr.;Stefan Bartoschek Dr.;Alexer Schiffer Dr.;K.Ulrich Wendt Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.;Teresa Carlomagno Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2008 Volume 47( Issue 40) pp:7736-7740
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.200801792
Co-reporter:ValerieS. Honndorf Dipl.-Chem.;Nicolas Coudevylle Dr.;Stefan Laufer Dr.;Stefan Becker Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2008 Volume 47( Issue 19) pp:3548-3551
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.200705614
Co-reporter:Anne Schuetz;Takanori Murakami;Noboru Takada;Jochen Junker;Masaru Hashimoto;Christian Griesinger
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2008 Volume 47( Issue 11) pp:2032-2034
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.200705037
Co-reporter:Manuel Etzkorn;Holger Kneuper;Pia Dünnwald;Vinesh Vijayan;Jens Krämer;Christian Griesinger;Stefan Becker;Gottfried Unden;Marc Baldus
Nature Structural and Molecular Biology 2008 15(10) pp:1031-1039
Publication Date(Web):2008-09-28
DOI:10.1038/nsmb.1493
The mechanistic understanding of how membrane-embedded sensor kinases recognize signals and regulate kinase activity is currently limited. Here we report structure-function relationships of the multidomain membrane sensor kinase DcuS using solid-state NMR, structural modeling and mutagenesis. Experimental data of an individual cytoplasmic Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS) domain were compared to structural models generated in silico. These studies, together with previous NMR work on the periplasmic PAS domain, enabled structural investigations of a membrane-embedded 40-kDa construct by solid-state NMR, comprising both PAS segments and the membrane domain. Structural alterations are largely limited to protein regions close to the transmembrane segment. Data from isolated and multidomain constructs favor a disordered N-terminal helix in the cytoplasmic domain. Mutations of residues in this region strongly influence function, suggesting that protein flexibility is related to signal transduction toward the kinase domain and regulation of kinase activity.
Co-reporter:Thomas Meins;Michael Habeck;Monika Bayrhuber;Karin Giller;Stefan Becker;Clemens Vonrhein;Saskia Villinger;Christian Griesinger;Markus Zweckstetter;Kornelius Zeth
PNAS 2008 Volume 105 (Issue 40 ) pp:15370-15375
Publication Date(Web):2008-10-07
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0808115105
The voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC), also known as mitochondrial porin, is the most abundant protein in the mitochondrial
outer membrane (MOM). VDAC is the channel known to guide the metabolic flux across the MOM and plays a key role in mitochondrially
induced apoptosis. Here, we present the 3D structure of human VDAC1, which was solved conjointly by NMR spectroscopy and x-ray
crystallography. Human VDAC1 (hVDAC1) adopts a β-barrel architecture composed of 19 β-strands with an α-helix located horizontally
midway within the pore. Bioinformatic analysis indicates that this channel architecture is common to all VDAC proteins and
is adopted by the general import pore TOM40 of mammals, which is also located in the MOM.
Co-reporter:ValerieS. Honndorf Dipl.-Chem.;Nicolas Coudevylle Dr.;Stefan Laufer Dr.;Stefan Becker Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2008 Volume 120( Issue 19) pp:3604-3607
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.200705614
Co-reporter:Peter Haberz Mag.;Jonathan Farjon Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2007 Volume 119(Issue 41) pp:
Publication Date(Web):4 OCT 2007
DOI:10.1002/ange.200790206
Co-reporter:Peter Haberz Mag.;Jonathan Farjon Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2007 Volume 46(Issue 41) pp:
Publication Date(Web):4 OCT 2007
DOI:10.1002/anie.200790206
Co-reporter:Jonathan Farjon, Wolfgang Bermel, Christian Griesinger
Journal of Magnetic Resonance 2006 Volume 180(Issue 1) pp:72-82
Publication Date(Web):May 2006
DOI:10.1016/j.jmr.2006.01.006
In weakly orienting media such as poly-γ-benzyl-l-glutamate (PBLG) a polymer that forms a chiral liquid crystal in organic solvents, the spectral resolution for embedded molecules is usually poor because of numerous 1H, 1H dipolar couplings that generally broaden proton spectra. Therefore 1H, 13C dipolar couplings are difficult or impossible to measure. Here, we incorporate Flip-Flop decoupling during detection into an HSQC experiment. Flip-Flop removes the 1H, 1H dipolar couplings and scales the chemical shifts of the protons as well as the 1H, 13C dipolar couplings during detection. A resolution gain by a factor 1.5–4.2 and improved signal intensity by an average factor of 1.6–1.7 have been obtained. This technique is demonstrated on (+)-menthol dissolved in a PBLG/CDCl3 phase.
Co-reporter:Ferno Rodriguez-Castañeda;Andrei Leonov;Peter Haberz;Christian Griesinger
Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry 2006 Volume 44(Issue S1) pp:S10-S16
Publication Date(Web):6 JUL 2006
DOI:10.1002/mrc.1811
In this article, approaches towards the paramagnetic tagging of diamagnetic proteins are reviewed. Alignment can be achieved by adding paramagnetic fusion proteins or peptides to the C- or the N-terminus or by attaching paramagnetic tags to Cystein residues. Applications for the study of homodimer structures and protein/ligand interactions, as well as protein domain dynamics, are reviewed. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Co-reporter:Sebastian Dziadek Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.;Horst Kunz Dr.;Uwe M. Reinscheid Dr.
Chemistry - A European Journal 2006 Volume 12(Issue 19) pp:
Publication Date(Web):27 APR 2006
DOI:10.1002/chem.200600144
To study the effect of O-glycosylation on the conformational propensities of a peptide backbone, a 20-residue peptide (GSTAPPAHGVTSAPDTRPAP) representing the full length tandem repeat sequence of the human mucin MUC1 and its analogue glycosylated with the (2,6)-sialyl-T antigen on Thr11, were prepared and investigated by NMR and molecular modeling. The peptides contain both the GVTSAP sequence, which is an effective substrate for GalNAc transferases, and the PDTRP fragment, a known epitope recognized by several anti-MUC1 monoclonal antibodies. It has been shown that glycosylation of threonine in the GVTSAP sequence is a prerequisite for subsequent glycosylation of the serine at GVTSAP. Furthermore, carbohydrates serve as additional epitopes for MUC1 antibodies. Investigation of the solution structure of the sialyl-T glycoeicosapeptide in a H2O/D2O mixture (9:1) under physiological conditions (25 °C and pH 6.5) revealed that the attachment of the saccharide side-chain affects the conformational equilibrium of the peptide backbone near the glycosylated Thr11 residue. For the GVTSA region, an extended, rod-like secondary structure was found by restrained molecular dynamics simulation. The APDTR region formed a turn structure which is more flexibly organized. Taken together, the joined sequence GVTSAPDTR represents the largest structural model of MUC1 derived glycopeptides analyzed so far.
Co-reporter:Uwe M. Reinscheid Dr.;Jonathan Farjon Dr.;Markus Radzom;Peter Haberz;Axel Zeeck ;Martin Blackledge Dr.;Christian Griesinger
ChemBioChem 2006 Volume 7(Issue 2) pp:
Publication Date(Web):17 JAN 2006
DOI:10.1002/cbic.200500277
The macrocyclic compound hormaomycin has been investigated by NMR spectroscopy and by restrained molecular-dynamics simulations. Measurement of residual dipolar couplings induced by dissolving the depsipeptide in a polyacrylamide gel compatible with DMSO and their incorporation into the structure calculation of the title compound improved the precision of the family of structures. In DMSO the macrocyclic ring shows two β-turns, whose positions in the sequence differ from those found in the CDCl3 solution structure and in the crystal structure obtained from hexylene glycol/H2O (50:50). The bulky side chain consisting of a 3-(2-nitrocyclopropyl)alanine and a chlorinated N-hydroxypyrrole moiety is flexible in DMSO.
Co-reporter:Uwe M. Reinscheid Dr.;Boris D. Zlatopolskiy Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.;Axel Zeeck Dr.;Armin de Meijere Dr.
Chemistry - A European Journal 2005 Volume 11(Issue 10) pp:
Publication Date(Web):7 MAR 2005
DOI:10.1002/chem.200400977
Four new aza-analogues of hormaomycin 1, a secondary metabolite with interesting biological activities produced by Streptomyces griseoflavus, were synthesized and subjected to preliminary tests of their antibiotic activity to provide new insights into the structure–activity relationship studies of this class of compounds. The solution structures of hormaomycin 1 and its aza-analogue 2 a were determined by NMR spectroscopy. The data exhibited a reasonably rigid conformation for both molecules, stabilized by stacking interactions between the aromatic moieties attached to the ring and the side chain. According to NMR-spectral data the aza-analogue epi-2 a has a rather different conformation and indeed shows no antibacterial activity whatsoever.
Co-reporter:Andrei Leonov Dr.;Brigitte Voigt;Ferno Rodriguez-Castañeda;Peyman Sakhaii Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Chemistry - A European Journal 2005 Volume 11(Issue 11) pp:
Publication Date(Web):30 MAR 2005
DOI:10.1002/chem.200400907
We describe the synthetic route to ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) derivatives that can be attached to surface-exposed thiol functional groups of cysteine residues in proteins, via a methylthiosulfonate moiety that is connected in a stereochemically unique way to the C-1 carbon atom of EDTA. Such compounds can be used to align proteins in solution without the need to add liquid crystalline media, and are, therefore, of great interest for the NMR spectroscopic analysis of biomolecules. The binding constant for the paramagnetic tag to lanthanide ions was determined by measuring luminescence. For the Tb+3–ligand complex, a Kb value of 6.5×1017 M−1 was obtained. This value is in excellent agreement with literature values for the related EDTA compound. In addition, it could be shown that there is no significant reduction in the luminescence intensity upon addition of a 104 excess of Ca2+ ions, indicating that this paramagnetic tag is compatible with buffers containing high concentrations of divalent alkaline earth ions.
Co-reporter:Víctor M. Sánchez-Pedregal Dr.;Marcel Reese;Jens Meiler Dr.;Marcel J. J. Blommers Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.;Teresa Carlomagno Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2005 Volume 44(Issue 27) pp:
Publication Date(Web):1 JUN 2005
DOI:10.1002/anie.200500503
Orientation of a ligand: The first observation of interligand NOEs between two competitive ligands A and B binding consecutively and not simultaneously to the same target is reported for baccatin III and epothilone A in the presence of tubulin. Such effects, which are mediated by spin diffusion through protein protons (see scheme), could be used to determine the relative orientation of competitive ligands in the receptor binding pocket.
Co-reporter:Peter Haberz Mag.;Jonathan Farjon Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2005 Volume 44(Issue 3) pp:
Publication Date(Web):29 DEC 2004
DOI:10.1002/anie.200461267
Organic molecules of different complexity are aligned by a DMSO-compatible gel in such a way that C–H dipolar couplings up to 29 Hz are observed. This paves the way to the simultaneous determination of conformation and configuration of organic compounds by NMR spectroscopy and thus enables the determination of the stereochemistry of natural products (e.g. hormaomycin, see picture) that cannot be crystallized.
Co-reporter:Nils A. Lakomek Dipl.-Phys.;Christophe Farès Dr.;Stefan Becker Dr.;Teresa Carlomagno Dr.;Jens Meiler Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2005 Volume 117(Issue 47) pp:
Publication Date(Web):8 NOV 2005
DOI:10.1002/ange.200502573
Ordnungsparameter, wie sie aus dipolaren Restkopplungen in NH-Gruppen abgeleitet wurden, belegen eine Beweglichkeit des Proteinrückgrats auf einer gegenüber der Korrelationszeit τC langsamen Zeitskala. Wenig bewegliche Amide (blau und grün) z. B. im Ubiquitin sind wasserstoffverbrückt und gehören zu Aminosäureresten, deren Seitenketten zum hydrophoben Kern zeigen, wohingegen bewegliche Amide (gelb, orange, rot) solvensexponierte Seitenketten haben und weniger H-Bindungen eingehen.
Co-reporter:Víctor M. Sánchez-Pedregal Dr.;Marcel Reese;Jens Meiler Dr.;Marcel J. J. Blommers Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.;Teresa Carlomagno Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2005 Volume 117(Issue 27) pp:
Publication Date(Web):1 JUN 2005
DOI:10.1002/ange.200500503
Stille Post: Die erste Beobachtung von Interligand-NOEs zwischen zwei kompetitiven Liganden A und B, die nicht gleichzeitig, sondern nacheinander an das gleiche Zielmolekül binden, wird für Baccatin III und Epothilon A in Gegenwart von Tubulin vorgestellt. Solche durch Spindiffusion über Proteinprotonen vermittelten Effekte (siehe Schema) könnten zur Bestimmung der relativen Orientierung kompetitiver Liganden in der Rezeptorbindetasche dienen.
Co-reporter:Nils A. Lakomek, Christophe Farès, Stefan Becker, Teresa Carlomagno, Jens Meiler,Christian Griesinger
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2005 44(47) pp:7776-7778
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.200502573
Co-reporter:Seigo Shima Dr.;Erica J. Lyon Dr.;Melanie Sordel-Klippert;Manuela Kauß;Jörg Kahnt;Rudolf K. Thauer Dr.;Klaus Steinbach Dr.;Xiulan Xie Dr.;Laurent Verdier Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2004 Volume 43(Issue 19) pp:
Publication Date(Web):5 APR 2004
DOI:10.1002/anie.200353763
A combination of NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry has been crucial in determining the structure of the relatively stable light-inactivated form of the cofactor of the hydrogenase Hmd (see scheme). These studies have shown that the chromophore bound to GMP through a phosphoester linkage is a pyridone derivative.
Co-reporter:Seigo Shima Dr.;Erica J. Lyon Dr.;Melanie Sordel-Klippert;Manuela Kauß;Jörg Kahnt;Rudolf K. Thauer Dr.;Klaus Steinbach Dr.;Xiulan Xie Dr.;Laurent Verdier Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2004 Volume 116(Issue 19) pp:
Publication Date(Web):5 APR 2004
DOI:10.1002/ange.200353763
Eine Kombination von NMR-Spektroskopie und Massenspektrometrie lieferte die entscheidenden Informationen bei der Bestimmung der Struktur einer relativ stabilen, durch Licht desaktivierten Form des Cofaktors der Hydrogenase Hmd (siehe Schema). Den Untersuchungen zufolge ist ein Pyridon-Chromophor über eine Phosphatgruppe an GMP gebunden.
Co-reporter:Teresa Carlomagno Dr.;Marcel J. J. Blommers Dr.;Jens Meiler Dr.;Wolfgang Jahnke Dr.;Thomas Schupp Dr.;Frank Petersen Dr.;Dieter Schinzer Dr.;Karl-Heinz Altmann Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2003 Volume 115(Issue 22) pp:
Publication Date(Web):5 JUN 2003
DOI:10.1002/ange.200390500
Co-reporter:Teresa Carlomagno Dr.;Marcel J. J. Blommers Dr.;Jens Meiler Dr.;Wolfgang Jahnke Dr.;Thomas Schupp Dr.;Frank Petersen Dr.;Dieter Schinzer Dr.;Karl-Heinz Altmann Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2003 Volume 115(Issue 22) pp:
Publication Date(Web):5 JUN 2003
DOI:10.1002/ange.200351276
Tubulingebundenes Epothilon A (grün; siehe Bild) unterscheidet sich in seiner Struktur an wichtigen Stellen von freiem Epothilon A (grau; ermittelt durch Röntgenstrukturanalyse). Die neuen Strukturdaten liefern zusammen mit den Ergebnissen von Modifizierungsexperimenten eine konsistente Beschreibung der funktionsentscheidenden Regionen der Verbindung.
Co-reporter:Teresa Carlomagno Dr.;Víctor M. Sánchez Dr.;Marcel J. J. Blommers Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2003 Volume 115(Issue 22) pp:
Publication Date(Web):5 JUN 2003
DOI:10.1002/ange.200350950
Die C-C-Torsionswinkel in HC-CCH3-Einheiten können durch ein neuartiges NMR-Experiment bestimmt werden. Grundlage der Messmethode, die am Beispiel eines Gemisches aus 13C-markiertem Epothilon (1) und Tubulin veranschaulicht wird, ist eine Kreuzkorrelation von Dipol-Dipol-Relaxationsgeschwindigkeiten in CH-CH-Gruppen. Die neue Pulssequenz kann prinzipiell auf jede HC-CCH3-Einheit angewendet werden, etwa auch auf Aminosäure-Seitenketten in Proteinen.
Co-reporter:Michael Karle Dipl.-Chem.;Dirk Bockelmann Dipl.-Chem.;Dirk Schumann Dipl.-Chem.;Christian Griesinger Dr.;Ulrich Koert Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2003 Volume 115(Issue 37) pp:
Publication Date(Web):25 SEP 2003
DOI:10.1002/ange.200352130
Über ein 14-gliedriges Bislactam gelang die Kupplung zweier konformativ schaltbarer Decalineinheiten (siehe Molekülstruktur, TBDPS=tert-Butyldiphenylsilyl). Das Lösen einer Bisacetalklammer am linken Molekülende führt zu einem Doppelringflip in der linken Decalineinheit, der durch konformative Kupplung über das 14-gliedrige Bislactam einen Doppelringflip in der rechten Decalineinheit induziert.
Co-reporter:Teresa Carlomagno Dr.;Víctor M. Sánchez Dr.;Marcel J. J. Blommers Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2003 Volume 42(Issue 22) pp:
Publication Date(Web):5 JUN 2003
DOI:10.1002/anie.200350950
C–C torsion angles in HC-CCH3 moieties can be measured by a new NMR experiment based on the measurement of CH–CH dipolar–dipolar cross-correlated relaxation rates and is demonstrated on a mixture of 13C-labeled epothilone (1) and tubulin. The new pulse sequence is broadly applicable to any HC-CCH3 moiety and therefore to a number of amino acid side chains in proteins.
Co-reporter:Teresa Carlomagno Dr.;Marcel J. J. Blommers Dr.;Jens Meiler Dr.;Wolfgang Jahnke Dr.;Thomas Schupp Dr.;Frank Petersen Dr.;Dieter Schinzer Dr.;Karl-Heinz Altmann Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2003 Volume 42(Issue 22) pp:
Publication Date(Web):5 JUN 2003
DOI:10.1002/anie.200351276
The tubulin-bound structure of epothilone A (shown in green) differs substantially from its free conformation (determined by X-ray crystallography, shown in gray). The new structural data correlate well with results from chemical modification experiments, giving a consistent picture of the functionally important regions of epothilone.
Co-reporter:Teresa Carlomagno Dr.;Marcel J. J. Blommers Dr.;Jens Meiler Dr.;Wolfgang Jahnke Dr.;Thomas Schupp Dr.;Frank Petersen Dr.;Dieter Schinzer Dr.;Karl-Heinz Altmann Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2003 Volume 42(Issue 22) pp:
Publication Date(Web):5 JUN 2003
DOI:10.1002/anie.200390473
Co-reporter:Hans-Dieter Arndt Dr.;Dirk Bockelmann Dipl.-Chem.;Andrea Knoll Dr.;Stefanie Lamberth Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.;Ulrich Koert Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2002 Volume 41(Issue 21) pp:
Publication Date(Web):31 OCT 2002
DOI:10.1002/1521-3773(20021104)41:21<4062::AID-ANIE4062>3.0.CO;2-U
Variable ion channels: A 22mer peptide derived from the D,L-peptide gramicidin A changes from an inactive to a highly ion-channel-active conformation (see picture). The helical structure of the active and inactive conformations was characterized by NMR spectroscopy and circular dichroism; conductance measurements led to the conclusion that there are two symmetrical binding sites for the Cs atom in the active form.
Co-reporter:Hans-Dieter Arndt Dr.;Dirk Bockelmann Dipl.-Chem.;Andrea Knoll Dr.;Stefanie Lamberth Dr.;Christian Griesinger Dr.;Ulrich Koert Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2002 Volume 114(Issue 21) pp:
Publication Date(Web):31 OCT 2002
DOI:10.1002/1521-3757(20021104)114:21<4234::AID-ANGE4234>3.0.CO;2-S
Verwandelbarer Ionenkanal: Ein 22mer-Peptid, das vom D,L-Peptid Gramicidin A abgeleitet wurde, wandelt sich bei Zugabe von Cs+ aus einer inaktiven in eine höchst ionenkanalaktive Konformation um (siehe Bild). Die helicalen Strukturen der aktiven und inaktiven Form wurden durch NMR-Spektroskopie und Circulardichroismus charakterisiert; Leitfähigkeitsmessungen ließen auf zwei symmetrische Bindungsstellen für die Cs-Atome in der aktiven Form schließen.
Co-reporter:T. Masini, J. Pilger, B. S. Kroezen, B. Illarionov, P. Lottmann, M. Fischer, C. Griesinger and A. K. H. Hirsch
Chemical Science (2010-Present) 2014 - vol. 5(Issue 9) pp:NaN3551-3551
Publication Date(Web):2014/06/12
DOI:10.1039/C4SC00588K
We applied for the first time an innovative ligand-based NMR methodology (STI) to a medicinal-chemistry project aimed at the development of inhibitors for the enzyme 1-deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate synthase (DXS). DXS is the first enzyme of the 2C-methyl-D-erythritol-4-phosphate (MEP) pathway, present in most bacteria (and not in humans) and responsible for the synthesis of the essential isoprenoid precursors. We designed de novo a first generation of fragments, using Deinococcus radiodurans DXS as a model enzyme, targeting the thiamine diphosphate (TDP) pocket of DXS whilst also exploring the putative substrate-binding pocket, where selectivity over other human TDP-dependent enzymes could be gained. The STI methodology – suitable for weak binders – was essential to determine the binding mode in solution of one of the fragments, circumventing the requirement for an X-ray co-crystal structure, which is known to be particularly challenging for this specific enzyme and in general for weak binders. Based on this finding, we carried out fragment growing and optimisation, which led to a three-fold more potent fragment, about as potent as the well-established thiamine analogue deazathiamine. The STI methodology proved therefore its strong potential as a tool to support medicinal-chemistry projects in their early stages, especially when dealing with weak binders.
Co-reporter:Alexander Krahn, Philip Lottmann, Thorsten Marquardsen, Andreas Tavernier, Maria-Teresa Türke, Marcel Reese, Andrei Leonov, Marina Bennati, Peter Hoefer, Frank Engelke and Christian Griesinger
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2010 - vol. 12(Issue 22) pp:NaN5840-5840
Publication Date(Web):2010/05/11
DOI:10.1039/C003381B
A DNP set-up is described where a liquid sample is hyperpolarized by the electron-nucleus Overhauser effect in a field of 0.34 T and transferred to a field of 14.09 T for NMR detection. In contrast to a previous set-up, using two dedicated magnets for polarization and detection, a dedicated ferroshim system was inserted into the bore of a 14.09 T shielded cryomagnet to provide a homogeneous low-field region in the stray field above the magnetic center. After polarization in the low-field the sample is transferred to the high-field magnetic center within 40 ms by a pneumatic shuttle system. In our set-up a standard high-resolution inverse 1H/13C selective probe was used for NMR detection and a homebuilt EPR cavity, operating in the TM110 mode was used for polarisation. First experimental data are presented. We observed a maximum proton Overhauser enhancement of up to εHF = −3.7 in the high-field position for a 5 mM 4-Oxo-TEMPO-D,15N (TEMPONE)/H2O sample. While this reproduces the DNP enhancement observed also in the old set-up, with the new set-up we observe enhancement on larger molecules that were impossible to enhance in the old set-up. Therefore, we can demonstrate for the first time Overhauser enhanced high resolution proton spectra of glucose and 2,2-dimethyl-2-silapentane-5-sulfonic acid sodium salt (DSS) in D2O, where the high resolution spectrum was acquired in the high-field position after polarizing the sample in the low-field.