996 resultados para HBZ
Resumo:
In this thesis, atomistic simulations are performed to investigate hydrophobic solvation and hydrophobic interactions in cosolvent/water binary mixtures. Many cosolvent/water binary mixtures exhibit non-ideal behavior caused by aggregation at the molecular scale level although they are stable and homogenous at the macroscopic scale. Force-field based atomistic simulations provide routes to relate atomistic-scale structure and interactions to thermodynamic solution properties. The predicted solution properties are however sensitive to the parameters used to describe the molecular interactions. In this thesis, a force field for tertiary butanol (TBA) and water mixtures is parameterized by making use of the Kirkwood-Buff theory of solution. The new force field is capable of describing the alcohol-alcohol, water-water and alcohol-water clustering in the solution as well as the solution components’ chemical potential derivatives in agreement with experimental data. With the new force field, the preferential solvation and the solvation thermodynamics of a hydrophobic solute in TBA/water mixtures have been studied. First, methane solvation at various TBA/water concentrations is discussed in terms of solvation free energy-, enthalpy- and entropy- changes, which have been compared to experimental data. We observed that the methane solvation free energy varies smoothly with the alcohol/water composition while the solvation enthalpies and entropies vary nonmonotonically. The latter occurs due to structural solvent reorganization contributions which are not present in the free energy change due to exact enthalpy-entropy compensation. It is therefore concluded that the enthalpy and entropy of solvation provide more detailed information on the reorganization of solvent molecules around the inserted solute. Hydrophobic interactions in binary urea/water mixtures are next discussed. This system is particularly relevant in biology (protein folding/unfolding), however, changes in the hydrophobic interaction induced by urea molecules are not well understood. In this thesis, this interaction has been studied by calculating the free energy (potential of mean force), enthalpy and entropy changes as a function of the solute-solute distance in water and in aqueous urea (6.9 M) solution. In chapter 5, the potential of mean force in both solution systems is analyzed in terms of its enthalpic and entropic contributions. In particular, contributions of solvent reorganization in the enthalpy and entropy changes are studied separately to better understand what are the changes in interactions in the system that contribute to the free energy of association of the nonpolar solutes. We observe that in aqueous urea the association between nonpolar solutes remains thermodynamically favorable (i.e., as it is the case in pure water). This observation contrasts a long-standing belief that clusters of nonpolar molecules dissolve completely in the presence of urea molecules. The consequences of our observations for the stability of proteins in concentrated urea solutions are discussed in the chapter 6 of the thesis.
Resumo:
„Synthese von Glycopeptiden und Glycopeptid-Protein-Konjugaten mit einer Partialstruktur des tumorassoziierten Mucins MUC1 zur Entwicklung von Tumorvakzinen“ Das Glycoprotein MUC1 ist in Tumorepithelzellen sonderlich stark überexprimiert und wegen der vorzeitig einsetzenden Sialylierung sind die Saccharid-Epitope der O-Glycanketten stark verkürzt (sog. tumorassoziierte Antigene). Dadurch werden auch bisher verborgene Peptidepitope des Glycoprotein-Rückgrates auf der Zelloberfläche der Epithelzellen zugänglich, die als fremd von den Zellen des Immunsystems erkannt werden können. Dies macht das MUC1-Zelloberfächenmolekül zu einem Zielmolekül in der Entwicklung von Tumorvakzinen. Diese beiden strukturellen Besonderheiten wurden in der Synthese von Glycohexadecapeptiden verbunden, indem die veränderten tumorassoziierten Saccharidstrukturen TN-, STN- und T-Antigen als Glycosylaminosäure-Festphasenbausteine synthetisiert wurden und in das Peptidepitop der Wiederholungseinheit des MUC1 durch Glycopeptid-Festphasensynthese eingebaut wurden. Wegen der inhärenten schwachen Immunogenität der kurzen Glycopeptide müssen die synthetisierten Glycopeptidstrukturen an ein Trägerprotein, welches das Immunsystem stimuliert, gebunden werden. Zur Anbindung der Glycopeptide ist ein selektives Kupplungsverfahren nötig, um definierte und strukturell einheitliche Glycopeptid-Protein-Konjugate zu erhalten. Es konnte eine neue Methode entwickelt werden, bei der die Konjugation durch eine radikalische Additionsreaktion von als Allylamide funktionalisierten Glycopeptiden an ein Thiol-modifiziertes Trägerprotein erfolgte. Dazu wurde anhand von synthetisierten, als Allylamide modifizierten Modellaminosäuren untersucht, ob diese Reaktion generell für eine Biokonjugation geeignet ist und etwaige Nebenreaktionen auftreten können. Mit dieser Methode konnten verschiedene MUC1-Glycopeptid-Trägerprotein-Konjugate hergestellt werden, deren immunologische Untersuchung noch bevorsteht. Das tumorassoziierte MUC1 nimmt in der immundominanten Region seiner Wiederholungseinheit eine knaufartige Struktur ein. Für die Entwicklung von selektiven Tumorvakzinen ist es von großer Bedeutung möglichst genau die Struktur der veränderten Zelloberflächenmoleküle nachzubilden. Durch die Synthese von cyclischen (Glyco)Peptiden wurde dieses Strukturelement fixiert. Dazu wurden olefinische Aminosäure Festphasenbausteine hergestellt, die zusammen mit den oben genannten Glycosylaminosäuren mittels einer Glycopeptid-Festphasensynthese in acyclische Glycopeptide eingebaut wurden. Diese wurden dann durch Ringschlussmetathese zyklisiert und im Anschluss reduziert und vollständig deblockiert. In einem dritten Projekt wurde der Syntheseweg zur Herstellung einer C-Glycosylaminosäure mit einer N-Acetylgalactosamin-Einheit entwickelt. Wichtige Schritte bei der von Glucosamin ausgehenden Synthese sind die Keck-Allylierung, eine Epimerisierung, die Herstellung eines Brom-Dehydroalanin-Derivates und eine B-Alkyl-Suzuki-Miyaura-Kreuzkupplung sowie Schutzgruppenoperationen. Der racemische Baustein konnte dann in der Peptid-Festphasensynthese eines komplexen MUC1-Tetanustoxin-Konjugates eingesetzt werden.
Resumo:
In this thesis I present theoretical and experimental results concern- ing the operation and properties of a new kind of Penning trap, the planar trap. It consists of circular electrodes printed on an isolating surface, with an homogeneous magnetic field pointing perpendicular to that surface. The motivation of such geometry is to be found in the construction of an array of planar traps for quantum informa- tional purposes. The open access to radiation of this geometry, and the long coherence times expected for Penning traps, make the planar trap a good candidate for quantum computation. Several proposals for quantum 2-qubit interactions are studied and estimates for their rates are given. An expression for the electrostatic potential is presented, and its fea- tures exposed. A detailed study of the anharmonicity of the potential is given theoretically and is later demonstrated by experiment and numerical simulations, showing good agreement. Size scalability of this trap has been studied by replacing the original planar trap by a trap twice smaller in the experimental setup. This substitution shows no scale effect apart from those expected for the scaling of the parameters of the trap. A smaller lifetime for trapped electrons is seen for this smaller trap, but is clearly matched to a bigger misalignment of the trap’s surface and the magnetic field, due to its more difficult hand manipulation. I also give a hint that this trap may be of help in studying non-linear dynamics for a sextupolarly perturbed Penning trap.
Resumo:
Gegenstand dieser Arbeit war die Untersuchung, welche Rolle endogen gebildete oxidative DNA-Modifikationen bei der Kanzerogenese spielen. Dazu wurden Cockayne Syndrom B-knockout-Mäuse (Csb-/-), 8-Hydroxyguanin-DNA-Glykosylase-knockout-Mäuse (Ogg1-/-) und Csb-/-/Ogg1-/- Mäuse generiert, die das bakterielle lacI-Gen (Big Blue®) tragen und somit für in vivo Mutationstests eingesetzt werden können. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass es in den Lebern der Ogg1-/- Mäuse zu einem 2,1-fachen und in Csb-/-/Ogg1-/- Mäusen zu einem statistisch signifikanten 3,3-fachen Anstieg der Mutationsfrequenz kommt. Die gefundene Erhöhung der Mutationsfrequenz war vor allem auf eine Erhöhung der G:C zu T:A Transversionen zurückzuführen, die typischerweise aus nicht repariertem 8 Hydroxyguanin (8-oxoG) entstehen. Aus mechanistischer Sicht verdeutlichen die Ergebnisse, dass OGG1 das primäre Abwehrsystem gegen oxidative DNA-Modifikationen darstellt und dass das CSB-Protein einen Ausfall von OGG1, selbst in nicht transkribierter DNA, teilweise kompensieren kann. Aus der Korrelation der gefundenen oxidativen DNA-Schäden - bestimmt mittels Alkalischer Elution und der bakteriellen Formamidopyrimidin-DNA-Glykosylase (Fpg-Protein) - mit der Mutationsfrequenz konnte abgeleitet werden, dass bereits weniger als 0,2 Fpg-sensitive DNA-Modifikationen pro 1 Million Basenpaare ausreichen, die spontane Mutationsfrequenz in vivo zu verdoppeln. Zur Untersuchung, welche Rolle die erhöhte Mutationsfrequenz bei der Krebsentstehung spielt, wurden Csb-/-/Ogg1-/- und Wildtyp-Mäuse mit dem Peroxisomenproliferator und spezifischem Leberpromotor WY-14,643 behandelt um spontan initiierte Hepatozyten zur Proliferation anzuregen. Als Endpunkt einer malignen Entartung wurde das Auftreten von Glucose-6-Phosphatase positiven und negativen Läsionen beobachtet. Es zeigte sich, dass Csb-/-/Ogg1-/- Mäuse signifikant mehr enzymveränderte Läsionen in ihren Lebern aufwiesen, als die Wildtyp-Kontrollen. Die Ergebnisse verdeutlichen, dass endogen gebildete oxidative DNA-Modifikationen und daraus resultierende Mutationen grundsätzlich einen erheblichen Anteil zur hohen spontanen Krebsinzidenz in der Bevölkerung leisten könnten.
Resumo:
We report on a strategy to prepare metal oxides including binary oxide and mixed metal oxide (MMO) in form of nanometer-sized particles using polymer as precursor. Zinc oxide nanoparticles are prepared as an example. The obtained zinc polyacrylate precursor is amorphous as confirmed by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The conversion from polymer precursor to ZnO nanocrystals by thermal pyrolysis was investigated by means of XRD, thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) and electron microscopy. The as-synthesized ZnO consists of many individual particles with a diameter around 40 nm as shown by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The photoluminescence (PL) and electron paramagnetic (EPR) properties of the material are investigated, too. Employing this method, ZnO nanocrystalline films are fabricated via pyrolysis of a zinc polyacrylate precursor film on solid substrate like silicon and quartz glass. The results of XRD, absorption spectra as well as TEM prove that both the ZnO nanopowder and film undergo same evolution process. Comparing the PL properties of films fabricated in different gas atmosphere, it is assigned that the blue emission of the ZnO films is due to crystal defect of zinc vacancy and green emission from oxygen vacancy. Two kinds of ZnO-based mixed metal oxide (Zn1-xMgxO and Zn1-xCoxO) particles with very precise stoichiometry are prepared by controlled pyrolysis of the corresponding polymer precursor at 550 oC. The MMO crystal particles are typically 20-50 nm in diameter. Doping of Mg in ZnO lattice causes shrinkage of lattice parameter c, while it remains unchanged with Co incorporation. Effects of bandgap engineering are seen in the Mg:ZnO system. The photoluminescence in the visible is enhanced by incorporation of magnesium on zinc lattice sites, while the emission is suppressed in the Co:ZnO system. Magnetic property of cobalt doped-ZnO is checked too and ferromagnetic ordering was not found in our samples. An alternative way to prepare zinc oxide nanoparticles is presented upon calcination of zinc-loaded polymer precursors, which is synthesized via inverse miniemulsion polymerization of the mixture of the acrylic acid and zinc nitrate. The as-prepared ZnO product is compared with that obtained from polymer-salt complex method. The obtained ZnO nanoparticles undergo surface modification via a phosphate modifier applying ultrasonication. The morphology of the modified particles is checked by SEM. And stability of the ZnO nanoparticles in aqueous dispersion is enhanced as indicated by the zeta-potential results.
Resumo:
The nervous system is the most complex organ in animals and the ordered interconnection of neurons is an essential prerequisite for normal behaviour. Neuronal connectivity requires controlled neuronal growth and differentiation. Neuronal growth essentially depends on the actin and microtubule cytoskeleton, and it has become increasingly clear, that crosslinking of these cytoskeletal fractions is a crucial regulatory process. The Drosophila Spectraplakin family member Short stop (Shot) is such a crosslinker and is crucial for several aspects of neuronal growth. Shot comprises various domains: An actin binding domain, a plakin-like domain, a rod domain, calcium responsive EF-hand motifs, a microtubule binding Gas2 domain, a GSR motif and a C-terminal EB1aff domain. Amongst other phenotypes, shot mutant animals exhibit severely reduced dendrites and neuromuscular junctions, the subcellular compartmentalisation of the transmembrane protein Fasciclin2 is affected, but it is also crucially required in other tissues, for example for the integrity of tendon cells, specialised epidermal cells which anchor muscles to the body wall. Despite these striking phenotypes, Shot function is little understood, and especially we do not understand how it can carry out functions as diverse as those described above. To bridge this gap, I capitalised on the genetic possibilities of the model system Drosophila melanogaster and carried out a structure-function analysis in different neurodevelopmental contexts and in tendon cells. To this end, I used targeted gene expression of existing and newly generated Shot deletion constructs in Drosophila embryos and larvae, analyses of different shot mutant alleles, and transfection of Shot constructs into S2 cells or cultured fibroblasts. My analyses reveal that a part of the Shot C-terminus is not essential in the nervous system but in tendon cells where it stabilises microtubules. The precise molecular mechanism underlying this activity is not yet elucidated but, based on the findings presented here, I have developed three alternative testable hypothesis. Thus, either binding of the microtubule plus-end tracking molecule EB1 through an EB1aff domain, microtubulebundling through a GSR rich motif or a combination of both may explain a context-specific requirement of the Shot C-terminus for tendon cell integrity. Furthermore, I find that the calcium binding EF-hand motif in Shot is exclusively required for a subset of neuronal functions of Shot but not in the epidermal tendon cells. These findings pave the way for complementary studies studying the impact of [Ca2+] on Shot function. Besides these differential requirements of Shot domains I find, that most Shot domains are required in the nervous system and tendon cells alike. Thus the microtubule Gas2 domain shows no context specific requirements and is equally essential in all analysed cellular contexts. Furthermore, I could demonstrate a partial requirement of the large spectrin-repeat rod domain of Shot in neuronal and epidermal contexts. I demonstrate that this domain is partially required in processes involving growth and/or tissue stability but dispensable for cellular processes where no mechanical stress resistance is required. In addition, I demonstrate that the CH1 domain a part of the N-terminal actin binding domain of Shot is only partially required for all analysed contexts. Thus, I conclude that Shot domains are functioning different in various cellular environments. In addition my study lays the base for future projects, such as the elucidation of Shot function in growth cones. Given the high degree of conservation between Shot and its mammalian orthologues MACF1/ACF7 and BPAG1, I believe that the findings presented in this study will contribute to the general understanding of spectraplakins across species borders.