TY - THES A1 - Behrendt, Felix Nicolas T1 - New bio-based polymers T1 - Neue biobasierte Polymere BT - synthesis and polymerization of cystine-based macrocycles BT - Synthese und Polymerisation von cystinbasierten Makrozyklen N2 - Redox-responsive polymers, such as poly(disulfide)s, are a versatile class of polymers with potential applications including gene- and drug-carrier systems. Their degradability under reductive conditions allows for a controlled response to the different redox states that are present throughout the body. Poly(disulfide)s are typically synthesized by step growth polymerizations. Step growth polymerizations, however, may suffer from low conversions and therefore low molar masses, limiting potential applications. The purpose of this thesis was therefore to find and investigate new synthetic routes towards the synthesis of amino acid-based poly(disulfide)s. The different routes in this thesis include entropy-driven ring opening polymerizations of novel macrocyclic monomers, derived from cystine derivatives. These monomers were obtained with overall yields of up to 77% and were analyzed by mass spectrometry as well as by 1D and 2D NMR spectroscopy. The kinetics of the entropy-driven ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ED-ROMP) were thoroughly investigated in dependence of temperature, monomer concentration, and catalyst concentration. The polymerization was optimized to yield poly(disulfide)s with weight average molar masses of up to 80 kDa and conversions of ~80%, at the thermodynamic equilibrium. Additionally, an alternative metal free polymerization, namely the entropy-driven ring-opening disulfide metathesis polymerization (ED-RODiMP) was established for the polymerization of the macrocyclic monomers. The effect of different solvents, concentrations and catalyst loadings on the polymerization process and its kinetics were studied. Polymers with very high weight average molar masses of up to 177 kDa were obtained. Moreover, various post-polymerization reactions were successfully performed. This work provides the first example of the homopolymerization of endo-cyclic disulfides by ED-ROMP and the first substantial study into the kinetics of the ED-RODiMP process. N2 - Redoxresponsive Polymere, wie etwa Polydisulfide, sind eine vielseitige Klasse von Polymeren, die unter anderem als Gen- und Wirkstoffträgersysteme eingesetzt werden können. Ihre Abbaubarkeit unter reduktiven Bedingungen ermöglicht eine kontrollierte Reaktion auf die verschiedenen Redoxzustände im Körper. Polydisulfide werden jedoch häufig durch Stufenwachstums-polymerisationen synthetisiert. Diese führen oft zu niedrigen Umsätzen und daher zu niedrigen molaren Massen. Das Ziel dieser Arbeit war daher neue Synthesewege für aminosäurebasierte Polydisulfide zu finden und zu untersuchen. Diese Wege beinhalteten entropiegetriebene ringöffnende Polymerisationen von neuen makrozyklischen Monomeren, auf der Basis von Cystin-Derivaten. Diese Monomere konnten mit einer Gesamtausbeute von bis zu 77% synthetisiert werden und wurden mit Massenspektrometrie sowie mit 1D- und 2D-NMR-Spektroskopie analysiert. Die Kinetik der entropiegetriebenen ringöffnenden Metathese Polymerisation (ED-ROMP) wurde im Hinblick auf Temperatur, Monomerkonzentration und Katalysatormenge sorgfältig untersucht. Durch Optimierungen konnten Polydisulfide mit gewichtsmittleren Molmassen von bis zu 80 kDa und Umsätzen von ~80%, im thermodynamischen Gleichgewicht synthetisiert werden. Zusätzlich wurde eine alternative metallfreie Polymerisation, die entropiegetriebene ringöffnende Disulfidmetathese Polymerisation (ED-RODiMP), für die Polymerisation der makrozyklischen Monomere etabliert. Die Auswirkungen verschiedener Lösungsmittel, Konzentrationen und Katalysatorkonzentrationen auf die Kinetik dieses Polymerisationsprozesses wurden untersucht. Hierdurch wurden Polymere mit sehr hohen gewichtsmittleren Molmassen von bis zu 177 kDa erhalten. Darüber hinaus wurden verschiedene Postpolymerisationsreaktionen erfolgreich durchgeführt. Diese Arbeit liefert das erste Beispiel für die Homopolymerisation endo-zyklischer Disulfide durch ROMP und eine erste substanzielle Studie der Kinetik des ED-RODiMP-Prozesses. KW - polymers KW - ADMET KW - ROMP KW - disulfide KW - macrocycles KW - ring-opening polymerization KW - amino acids KW - Polymere KW - ADMET KW - ROMP KW - Disulfide KW - Makrozyklen KW - ringöffnende Polymerisation KW - Aminosäuren Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-418316 ER - TY - THES A1 - Fritz, Christina T1 - Der Einfluß des primären Stickstoffstoffwechsels auf den Aminosäure- und Sekundärstoffwechsel in Nicotiana tabacum L. T1 - The impact of primary nitrogen metabolism on amino acid and secondary metabolism in Nicotiana tabacum L. N2 - Es ist bekannt, dass Änderungen im Kohlenstoff- bzw. Stickstoffstaus der Pflanzen zu einer parallelen statt reziproken Änderung der kohlenstoff- und stickstoffhaltigen Primärmetabolite führen. Unter diesem Gesichtspunkt wurden in der vorliegenden Arbeit der Aminosäurestoffwechsel und der Sekundärstoffwechsel unter reduzierten Stickstoffbedingungen untersucht. Zur Beeinflussung des Stickstoffstoffwechsels wurden nitratmangelernährte Tabakwildtyppflanzen und Genotypen mit unterschiedlich stark reduzierter Nitratreduktase-Aktivität verwendet. Dieses experimentelle System erlaubt zusätzlich durch den Vergleich Nitrat defizienter Wildtyppflanzen mit Nitrat akkumulierenden NIA-Transformanten Prozesse zu identifizieren, die durch Nitrat gesteuert werden. Die Analysen der Primär- und Sekundärmetabolite wurde in allen Genotypen diurnal durchgeführt, um auch tageszeitlich abhängige Prozesse zu identifizieren. Die Analyse der absoluten Gehalte aller individuellen Aminosäuren enthüllte bei den meisten erstaunlich stabile diurnale Muster mit einem Anstieg während des Tages und einem Abfall in der Nacht in Wildtyppflanzen gewachsen mit ausreichend Nitrat. Dieses Ergebnis legt die Schlussfolgerung nahe, dass die Biosynthese der Aminosäuren koordiniert abläuft. In Pflanzen mit reduziertem Stickstoffstatus haben diese diurnalen Muster jedoch keinen Bestand. Die Kombination des erzeugten stickstoffbasierten Aminosäuredatensatz in Kombination mit einem bereits erzeugten Aminosäuredatensatz unter kohlenstofflimitierten Bedingungen von Matt et al. (2002) führte durch Hauptkomponentenanalyse (PCA) und Korrelationsanalyse zu dem Ergebnis, dass die Hypothese nach einer koordinierten Aminosäurebiosynthese nicht allgemeine Gültigkeit hat. Die PCA identifizierte Glutamin, Glutamat, Aspartat, Glycin, Pheny-lalanin und Threonin als Faktoren, die den Datensätzen ihre charakteristische Eigenschaft und deren Varianz verleihen. Die Korrelationsanalyse zeigte, dass die sehr guten Korrelationen der individuellen Aminosäuren untereinander in reduzierten Stickstoff- und Kohlenstoffbedingungen sich verschlechtern. Das Verhältnis einer einzelnen Aminosäure relativ zu den anderen führte zur Identifizierung einiger Aminosäuren, die individuelle Antworten auf Stickstoff- und/oder Kohlenstoffstatus zeigen, und/oder speziell auf Nitrat, Licht und/oder den E-nergiestatus der Thylakoidmembran. Glutamat beispielsweise verhält sich in den meisten Situationen stabil, Phenylalanin dagegen zeigt in jeder physiologischen Situation eine individuelle Antwort. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit führen zu einer Erweiterung der Hypothese einer koordinierten Synthese der Aminosäuren dahingehend, dass diese nicht generell für alle Aminosäuren angenommen werden kann. Es gibt einige Aminosäuren deren, Anteile sich situationsbedingt anpassen. Die Reduktion des Stickstoffstatus in nitratmangelernährten Tabakwildtyppflanzen führte zu der, nach der „Carbon-Nutrient-Balance“ Hypothese erwarteten Verlagerung der kohlenstoffreichen Phenylpropanoide und des stickstoffreichen Nikotins. Die Erhöhung der Phenylpropanoidgehalte war nicht in der Nitrat akkumulierenden NIA-Transformante zu beobachten und somit konnte Nitrat als regulatorisches Element identifiziert werden. Ein Einfluss der Vorläufermetabolite konnte ausgeschlossen werden, da sowohl nitratmangelernährter Wildtyp als auch die Nitrat akkumulierende NIA-Transformante ähnliche Gehalte dieser aufwiesen. Genexpressionsanalysen über Mikroarray-Hybridisierung und quantitative RT-PCR zeigten, dass Nitrat durch noch nicht geklärte Mechanismen Einfluss auf die Expression einiger Gene nimmt, die dem Phenylpropanoidstoffwechsels zugeordnet sind. Aus der Arbeit hervorgegangene Veröffentlichungen: Christina Fritz, Natalia Palacios-Rojas, Regina Feil und Mark Stitt (2006) Regulation of Secondary Metabolism by the Carbon-Nitrogen Status in Tobacco: Nitrate Inhibits Large Sectors of Phenylpropanoid Metabolism. Plant Journal 46, 533 - 548 Christina Fritz, Petra Matt, Cathrin Müller, Regina Feil und Mark Stitt (2006) Impact of the Carbon-Nitrogen Status on the Amino Acid Profile in Tobacco Source Leaves. Plant, Cell and Environment 29 (11), 2009 - 2111 N2 - It is known that changes in carbon and nitrogen status of a plant lead to parallel rather than reciprocal changes of carbon and nitrogen containing primary metabolites. Based on this finding the influence of carbon and nitrogen status on the amino acid profile as well as on secondary metabolism was investigated in tobacco. Manipulations of the nitrogen status were carried out in two ways: Tobacco wild type plants were cultivated in nitrogen-replete and nitrogen starved conditions; in addition nitrate accumulating transformants with reduced nitrate reductase (NIA) activity were used. The comparison of the nitrate starved wild type and the nitrate accumulating NIA-transformant allows to distinguish processes which were driven by the nitrogen status of a plant or by nitrate itself. Due to the fact that most primary metabolites have diurnal changes the analysis of primary and secondary metabolites were done at six different time points per day in order to identify diurnal processes. Analysis of the absolute levels of individual amino acids under normal nitrogen supply conditions reveals characteristic diurnal patterns for the majority of amino acids with an increase during the day and a decrease during the night. This result indicates that amino acid biosynthesis might be coordinated. However these diurnal patterns are no longer stable in plants with reduced nitrogen status; furthermore absolute levels of individual amino acids differed over a wide range of concentrations. The hypothesis of a coordinated regulation of amino acid metabolism was further tested by combining this dataset with an amino acid dataset produced under carbon limited conditions (Matt et al., 2002) and applying Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and correlation analysis. Glutamine, glutamate, aspartate, glycine, phenylalanine and threonine were responsible for the clear separation of the different genotypes and experimental conditions in the PCA plot. The data from the correlation analysis show that most of the minor amino acids have very good correlations under carbon and nitrogen sufficient conditions. These correlations became weaker with decreasing carbon and nitrogen status of the plants. These results clearly indicate that a coordinated biosynthesis of amino acids is not a general phenomenon. Comparing the levels of each individual amino acid to the total amino acid pool revealed specific answers of a particular amino acid to carbon and/or nitrogen status, to nitrate and/or light and to energy status of the thylakoid membrane. Glutamate for instance is remarkably stable in most of the conditions and phenylalanine shows an individual response in every situation. From these results it was concluded that the hypothesis of a coordinated biosynthesis of amino acids might be true for some amino acids, but clearly needs to be extended because some amino acids adjust their levels in an individual fashion depending on the external conditions. The reduction of nitrogen status of nitrate starved wild type plants leads to a shift from carbon-rich phenylpropanoids to nitrogen-rich nicotine as predicted by the “carbon-nutrient-balance hypothesis”. Increased phenylpropanoids were not observed in nitrate accumulating NIA-transformants. Therefore nitrate could be identified as a regulatory element in phenyl-propanoid metabolism. A regulatory influence of precursors could be excluded since nitrate starved wild type and NIA-transformant had similar levels. Genexpression analysis via microarry hybridisation and quantitative RT-PCR shows that nitrate acts a transcriptional regulator of genes involved in phenylpropanoid metabolism. The elucidation of this regulatory role of nitrate requires further investigation. KW - Nitrat KW - Aminosäuren KW - sekundäre Pflanzenstoffe KW - Stickstoff KW - Tabak KW - nitrate KW - amino acids KW - plant secondary metabolites KW - nitrogen KW - tobacco Y1 - 2006 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-13322 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fuehrer, Felix N. A1 - Schlaad, Helmut T1 - ADMET polymerization of amino-acid-based diene JF - Macromolecular chemistry and physics N2 - 1,4-Di(homo)allyl-2,5-diketopiperazines are synthesized and polymerized via ADMET using the Hoveyda-Grubbs 2nd generation catalyst. The but-3-enylated diketopiperazine can be converted into unsaturated tertiary polyamide with molar mass of <3000 g mol(-1), whereas the allylated diketopiperazine cannot. Double-bond isomerization occurs regardless of whether or not benzoquinone is present. A polyesteramide with a higher molar mass of ca. 4800 g mol(-1) is obtained by the alternating copolymerization (ALTMET) of 1,4-di(but-3-enyl)-2,5-di ketopiperazine and ethylene glycol diacrylate. A post-polymerization modification of the poly(ester)amides via radical thiol-ene chemistry, however, fails. KW - acyclic diene metathesis (ADMET) polymerization KW - amino acids KW - diketopiperazine KW - metathesis KW - step-growth polymerization Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/macp.201400166 SN - 1022-1352 SN - 1521-3935 VL - 215 IS - 22 SP - 2268 EP - 2273 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lachmann, Sabrina C. A1 - Mettler-Altmann, Tabea A1 - Wacker, Alexander A1 - Spijkerman, Elly T1 - Nitrate or ammonium BT - Influences of nitrogen source on the physiology of a green alga JF - Ecology and evolution N2 - In freshwaters, algal species are exposed to different inorganic nitrogen (Ni) sources whose incorporation varies in biochemical energy demand. We hypothesized that due to the lesser energy requirement of ammonium (NH4+)-use, in contrast to nitrate (NO3-)-use, more energy remains for other metabolic processes, especially under CO2-and phosphorus (Pi) limiting conditions. Therefore, we tested differences in cell characteristics of the green alga Chlamydomonas acidophila grown on NH4+ or NO3- under covariation of CO2 and Pi-supply in order to determine limitations, in a full-factorial design. As expected, results revealed higher carbon fixation rates for NH4+ grown cells compared to growth with NO3- under low CO2 conditions. NO3- -grown cells accumulated more of the nine analyzed amino acids, especially under Pi-limited conditions, compared to cells provided with NH4+. This is probably due to a slower protein synthesis in cells provided with NO3-. In contrast to our expectations, compared to NH4+ -grown cells NO3- -grown cells had higher photosynthetic efficiency under Pi-limitation. In conclusion, growth on the Ni-source NH4+ did not result in a clearly enhanced Ci-assimilation, as it was highly dependent on Pi and CO2 conditions (replete or limited). Results are potentially connected to the fact that C. acidophila is able to use only CO2 as its inorganic carbon (Ci) source. KW - amino acids KW - carbon uptake kinetics KW - CO2 conditions KW - nitrogen KW - phosphorus limitation Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4790 SN - 2045-7758 VL - 9 IS - 3 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meyer, Sabine A1 - Mainz, Andi A1 - Kehr, Jan-Christoph A1 - Suessmuth, Roderich A1 - Dittmann, Elke T1 - Prerequisites of Isopeptide Bond Formation in Microcystin Biosynthesis JF - ChemBioChem : a European journal of chemical biology N2 - The biosynthesis of the potent cyanobacterial hepatotoxin microcystin involves isopeptide bond formation through the carboxylic acid side chains of d-glutamate and -methyl d-aspartate. Analysis of the in vitro activation profiles of the two corresponding adenylation domains, McyE-A and McyB-A(2), either in a didomain or a tridomain context with the cognate thiolation domain and the upstream condensation domain revealed that substrate activation of both domains strictly depended on the presence of the condensation domains. We further identified two key amino acids in the binding pockets of both adenylation domains that could serve as a bioinformatic signature of isopeptide bond-forming modules incorporating d-glutamate or d-aspartate. Our findings further contribute to the understanding of the multifaceted role of condensation domains in nonribosomal peptide synthetase assembly lines. KW - amino acids KW - biosynthesis KW - cyanobacteria KW - nonribosomal peptide KW - substrate specificity Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/cbic.201700389 SN - 1439-4227 SN - 1439-7633 VL - 18 SP - 2376 EP - 2379 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Shi, Jiang A1 - Xie, Dongchao A1 - Qi, Dandan A1 - Peng, Qunhua A1 - Chen, Zongmao A1 - Schreiner, Monika A1 - Lin, Zhi A1 - Baldermann, Susanne T1 - Methyl jasmonate-induced changes of flavor profiles during the processing of Green, Oolong, and Black Tea JF - Frontiers in plant science N2 - Tea aroma is one of the most important factors affecting the character and quality of tea. Here we describe the practical application of methyl jasmonate (MeJA) to improve the aroma quality of teas. The changes of selected metabolites during crucial tea processing steps, namely, withering, fixing and rolling, and fermentation, were analyzed. MeJA treatment of tea leaves (12, 24, 48, and 168 h) greatly promotes the aroma quality of green, oolong, and black tea products when comparing with untreated ones (0 h) and as confirmed by sensory evaluation. MeJA modulates the aroma profiles before, during, and after processing. Benzyl alcohol, benzaldehyde, 2-phenylethyl alcohol, phenylacetaldehyde, and trans-2-hexenal increased 1.07- to 3-fold in MeJA-treated fresh leaves and the first two maintained at a higher level in black tea and the last two in green tea. This correlates with a decrease in aromatic amino acids by more than twofold indicating a direct relation to tryptophan- and phenylalanine-derived volatiles. MeJA-treated oolong tea was characterized by a more pleasant aroma. Especially the terpenoids linalool and oxides, geraniol, and carvenol increased by more than twofold. KW - methyl jasmonate KW - aroma quality KW - volatile compounds KW - amino acids KW - tea processing Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2019.00781 SN - 1664-462X VL - 10 PB - Frontiers Research Foundation CY - Lausanne ER -