Elucidating the details of the formation, stability, interactions, and reactivity of biomolecular systems under extreme environmental conditions, including high salt concentrations in brines and high osmotic and high hydrostatic pressures, is of fundamental biological, astrobiological, and biotechnological importance. Bacteria and archaea are able to survive in the deep ocean or subsurface of Earth, where pressures of up to 1 kbar are reached. The deep subsurface of Mars may host high concentrations of ions in brines, such as perchlorates, but we know little about how these conditions and the resulting osmotic stress conditions would affect the habitability of such environments for cellular life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevious studies suggest that berberine, an isoquinoline alkaloid, has antiviral potential and is a possible therapeutic candidate against SARS-CoV-2. The molecular underpinnings of its action are still unknown. Potential targets include quadruplexes (G4Q) in the viral genome as they play a key role in modulating the biological activity of viruses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe development of DNA-compatible reaction methodologies is a central theme to advance DNA-encoded screening library technology. Recently, we were able to show that sulfonic acid-functionalized block copolymer micelles facilitated Brønsted acid-promoted reactions such as the Povarov reaction on DNA-coupled starting materials with minimal DNA degradation. Here, the impact of polymer composition on micelle shape, and reaction conversion was investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the interaction of lipid membranes with the deep-sea osmolyte trimethalamine-N-oxide (TMAO), which is known to stabilize proteins most efficiently against various environmental stress factors, including high hydrostatic pressure (HHP). Small-angle X-ray-scattering was applied in combination with fluorescence and infrared spectroscopy, calorimetric and AFM measurements to yield insights into the influence of TMAO on the supramolecular structure, hydration level, lipid order as well as the phase behavior of one- and three-component model biomembranes, covering a large region of the temperature-pressure phase space. Our results show that TMAO has not only a marked effect on the conformational dynamics and stability of proteins and nucleic acids, but also on lipid bilayer systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArtificial metalloenzymes (AME's) are an interesting class of selective catalysts, where the chiral environment of proteins is used as chiral ligand for a catalytic metal. Commonly, the active site of an enzyme is modified with a catalytically active metal. Here we present an approach, where the commercial proteins lysozyme (LYS) and bovine serum albumin (BSA) can be converted into highly active and enantioselective AME's.
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