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Dive into the research topics where Claudia Birkemeyer is active.

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Featured researches published by Claudia Birkemeyer.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2003

Comprehensive chemical derivatization for gas chromatography-mass spectrometry-based multi-targeted profiling of the major phytohormones

Claudia Birkemeyer; Ania Kolasa; Joachim Kopka

In the present investigation we report selection of the N-methyl-N-(tert.-butydimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamide (MTBSTFA) reagent as the most comprehensive derivatization protocol among 17 tested reactions covering trifluoroacetylation, pentafluorobenzylation, methylations, and trimethylsilylations. MTBSTFA allowed easy and robust tert.-butyldimethylsilyl derivatization of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid, indole-3-acetic acid, (+/-)-jasmonic acid, salicylic acid, (+/-)-abscisic acid, meta-topolin, and trans-zeatin. Detection limits as analysed by selected ion monitoring quadrupole GC-MS were 0.2, 0.01, 1.0, 0.02, 0.3, 0.3, and 0.9 pmol of injected substance, respectively. Analysis of gibberellic acid A3, trans-zeatin riboside and (+/-)-abscisic acid-beta-D-glucopyranosyl ester was best when coupled by splitting extracts and trimethysilylation. The MTBSTFA derivatization protocol was optimised, and validated. The preparation was insensitive to 2% residual water and to < or = 1 day storage at room temperature. The final scheme was highly reproducible and successfully applied to extracts from approximately 300 mg (fresh mass) of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) root and Arabidopsis thaliana seedling.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Curcumin inhibits glyoxalase 1: a possible link to its anti-inflammatory and anti-tumor activity.

Thore Santel; Gabi Pflug; Angelika Schäfer; Marcus Hollenbach; Martin Buchold; Anja Hintersdorf; Inge Lindner; Andreas Otto; Marina Bigl; Ilka Oerlecke; Antje Hutschenreuter; Ulrich Sack; Klaus Huse; Marco Groth; Claudia Birkemeyer; Wolfgang Schellenberger; Rolf Gebhardt; Mathias Platzer; Thomas Weiss; Mookambeswaran A. Vijayalakshmi; Monika Krüger; Gerd Birkenmeier

Background Glyoxalases (Glo1 and Glo2) are involved in the glycolytic pathway by detoxifying the reactive methylglyoxal (MGO) into D-lactate in a two-step reaction using glutathione (GSH) as cofactor. Inhibitors of glyoxalases are considered as anti-inflammatory and anti-carcinogenic agents. The recent finding that various polyphenols modulate Glo1 activity has prompted us to assess curcumins potency as an Glo1 inhibitor. Methodology/Principal Findings Cultures of whole blood cells and tumor cell lines (PC-3, JIM-1, MDA-MD 231 and 1321N1) were set up to investigate the effect of selected polyphenols, including curcumin, on the LPS-induced cytokine production (cytometric bead-based array), cell proliferation (WST-1 assay), cytosolic Glo1 and Glo2 enzymatic activity, apoptosis/necrosis (annexin V-FITC/propidium iodide staining; flow cytometric analysis) as well as GSH and ATP content. Results of enzyme kinetics revealed that curcumin, compared to the polyphenols quercetin, myricetin, kaempferol, luteolin and rutin, elicited a stronger competitive inhibitory effect on Glo1 (Ki = 5.1±1.4 µM). Applying a whole blood assay, IC50 values of pro-inflammatory cytokine release (TNF-α, IL-6, IL-8, IL-1β) were found to be positively correlated with the Ki-values of the aforementioned polyphenols. Moreover, whereas curcumin was found to hamper the growth of breast cancer (JIMT-1, MDA-MB-231), prostate cancer PC-3 and brain astrocytoma 1321N1 cells, no effect on growth or vitality of human primary hepatocytes was elucidated. Curcumin decreased D-lactate release by tumor cells, another clue for inhibition of intracellular Glo1. Conclusions/Significance The results described herein provide new insights into curcumins biological activities as they indicate that inhibition of Glo1 by curcumin may result in non-tolerable levels of MGO and GSH, which, in turn, modulate various metabolic cellular pathways including depletion of cellular ATP and GSH content. This may account for curcumins potency as an anti-inflammatory and anti-tumor agent. The findings support the use of curcumin as a potential therapeutic agent.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Posttranslational Modification of Human Glyoxalase 1 Indicates Redox-Dependent Regulation

Gerd Birkenmeier; Christin Stegemann; Ralf Hoffmann; Robert Günther; Klaus Huse; Claudia Birkemeyer

Background Glyoxalase 1 (Glo1) and glyoxalase 2 (Glo2) are ubiquitously expressed cytosolic enzymes that catalyze the conversion of toxic α-oxo-aldehydes into the corresponding α-hydroxy acids using L-glutathione (GSH) as a cofactor. Human Glo1 exists in various isoforms; however, the nature of its modifications and their distinct functional assignment is mostly unknown. Methodology/Principal Findings We characterized native Glo1 purified from human erythrocytes by mass spectrometry. The enzyme was found to undergo four so far unidentified posttranslational modifications: (i) removal of the N-terminal methionine 1, (ii) N-terminal acetylation at alanine 2, (iii) a vicinal disulfide bridge between cysteine residues 19 and 20, and (iv) a mixed disulfide with glutathione on cysteine 139. Glutathionylation of Glo1 was confirmed by immunological methods. Both, N-acetylation and the oxidation state of Cys19/20, did not impact enzyme activity. In contrast, glutathionylation strongly inhibited Glo1 activity in vitro. The discussed mechanism for enzyme inhibition by glutathionylation was validated by molecular dynamics simulation. Conclusion/Significance It is shown for the first time that Glo1 activity directly can be regulated by an oxidative posttranslational modification that was found in the native enzyme, i.e., glutathionylation. Inhibition of Glo1 by chemical reaction with its co-factor and the role of its intramolecular disulfides are expected to be important factors within the context of redox-dependent regulation of glucose metabolism in cells.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2011

A nitrilase from a metagenomic library acts regioselectively on aliphatic dinitriles

Sally Bayer; Claudia Birkemeyer; Meike Ballschmiter

Several novel nitrilases were selected from metagenomic libraries using cinnamonitrile and a mixture of six different nitriles as substrates. The nitrilase gene nit1 was expressed in Escherichia coli and the resulting protein was further examined concerning its biochemical properties. Nit1 turned out to be an aliphatic nitrilase favoring dinitriles over mononitriles. Stereochemical analysis revealed that Nit1 converted the dinitrile 2-methylglutaronitrile regioselectively. Hydrolysis at the ω-nitrile group of a dinitrile, such as catalyzed by Nit1, leads to ω-cyanocarboxylic acids, which are important precursors for chemical and pharmaceutical products. Nit1 metabolized 2-methylglutaronitrile to the corresponding ω-cyanocarboxylic acid 4-cyanopentanoic acid can be used for the production of the fine chemical 1,5-dimethyl-2-piperidone.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2008

Ethyl pyruvate and ethyl lactate down-regulate the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and modulate expression of immune receptors

Marcus Hollenbach; Anja Hintersdorf; Klaus Huse; Ulrich Sack; Marina Bigl; Marco Groth; Thore Santel; Martin Buchold; Inge Lindner; Andreas Otto; Dieter Sicker; Wolfgang Schellenberger; Johannes Almendinger; Barbara Pustowoit; Claudia Birkemeyer; Mathias Platzer; Ilka Oerlecke; Gerd Birkenmeier

Esters of alpha-oxo-carbonic acids such as ethyl pyruvate (EP) have been demonstrated to exert inhibitory effects on the production of anti-inflammatory cytokines. So far, there is no information about effects, if any, of ethyl lactate (EL), an obviously inactive analogue of EP, on inflammatory immune responses. In the present study, we provide evidence that the anti-inflammatory action of alpha-oxo-carbonic acid esters is mediated by inhibition of glyoxalases (Glo), cytosolic enzymes that catalyse the conversion of alpha-oxo-aldehydes such as methylglyoxal (MGO) into the corresponding alpha-hydroxy acids using glutathione as a cofactor. In vitro enzyme activity measurements revealed the inhibition of human Glo1 by alpha-oxo-carbonic acid esters, whilst alpha-hydroxy-carbonic acid esters such as EL were not inhibitory. In contrast, both EP and EL were shown to suppress the Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced production of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin (IL)-1beta, IL-6 and IL-8 from human immunocompetent cells, and modulated the expression of the immune receptors HLA-DR, CD14 and CD91 on human monocytes. Here, we show a crossing link between glyoxalases and the immune system. The results described herein introduce glyoxalases as a possible target for therapeutic approaches of immune suppression.


Analytical Methods | 2012

Comparison of extraction conditions and normalization approaches for cellular metabolomics of adherent growing cells with GC-MS

Antje Hutschenreuther; Andreas Kiontke; Gerd Birkenmeier; Claudia Birkemeyer

Common extraction protocols and sampling procedures for GC-MS metabolite profiling were applied to the MCF-7 breast cancer cell culture as a model system of adherent growing cells and validated for repeatability and reproducibility. For normalization of a concentration series after methanolic extraction, results obtained with cell count normalization equalled normalization to the chromatogram total ion current as a chromatogram-intrinsic parameter, indicating that cell counting as an additional experimental step could be omitted. However, we show here that both normalization strategies should only be applied for comparison of extracts with similar concentrations complicating comparisons of different samples, e.g. with different biological origin. Therefore, the application of TIC thresholds for the comparison of differently concentrated extracts is recommended with respect to the accuracy of the data, the working effort and complexity of the biological experiment. For proof of concept, MCF-7 cell samples generated by different sampling procedures were assessed using these thresholds. Within this context, direct extraction of adherent growing cells without any further preparation steps, which allows for rapid quenching of cell metabolism and efficient sample extraction, is discussed as an alternative to conventional cell counting and extraction. In conclusion, we recommend the consideration of chromatogram intensity thresholds for the mean comparison of differently concentrated sample replicates in GC-MS metabolite profiling.


Nature | 2017

Elucidation of the biosynthesis of the methane catalyst coenzyme F430

Simon J. Moore; Sven T. Sowa; Christopher Schuchardt; Evelyne Deery; Andrew D. Lawrence; José Vazquez Ramos; Susan Billig; Claudia Birkemeyer; Peter T. Chivers; Mark J. Howard; Stephen E. J. Rigby; Gunhild Layer; Martin J. Warren

Methane biogenesis in methanogens is mediated by methyl-coenzyme M reductase, an enzyme that is also responsible for the utilization of methane through anaerobic methane oxidation. The enzyme uses an ancillary factor called coenzyme F430, a nickel-containing modified tetrapyrrole that promotes catalysis through a methyl radical/Ni(ii)-thiolate intermediate. However, it is unclear how coenzyme F430 is synthesized from the common primogenitor uroporphyrinogen iii, incorporating 11 steric centres into the macrocycle, although the pathway must involve chelation, amidation, macrocyclic ring reduction, lactamization and carbocyclic ring formation. Here we identify the proteins that catalyse the biosynthesis of coenzyme F430 from sirohydrochlorin, termed CfbA–CfbE, and demonstrate their activity. The research completes our understanding of how the repertoire of tetrapyrrole-based pigments are constructed, permitting the development of recombinant systems to use these metalloprosthetic groups more widely.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2015

GC-MS Method for the Quantitation of Carbohydrate Intermediates in Glycation Systems.

Sanja Milkovska-Stamenova; Rico Schmidt; Andrej Frolov; Claudia Birkemeyer

Glycation is a ubiquitous nonenzymatic reaction of carbonyl compounds with amino groups of peptides and proteins, resulting in the formation of advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) and thereby affecting the properties and quality of thermally processed foods. In this context, mechanisms of the Maillard reaction of proteins need to be understood; that is, glycation products and intermediates (α-dicarbonyls and sugars) need to be characterized. Although the chemical analysis of proteins, peptides, and α-dicarbonyls is well established, sensitive and precise determination of multiple sugars in glycation mixtures is still challenging. This paper presents a gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) method for absolute quantitation of 22 carbohydrates in the model of phosphate-buffered glycation systems. The approach relied on the removal of the phosphate component by polymer-based ion exchange solid phase extraction (SPE) followed by derivatization of carbohydrates and subsequent GC-MS analysis. Thereby, baseline separation for most of the analytes and detection limits of up to 10 fmol were achieved. The method was successfully applied to the analysis of in vitro glycation reactions. Thereby, at least seven sugar-related Maillard reaction intermediates could be identified and quantified. The most abundant reaction product was d-fructose, reaching 2.70 ± 0.12 and 2.38 ± 0.66 mmol/L after 120 min of incubation in the absence and presence of the model peptide, respectively.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

A Snapshot of the Plant Glycated Proteome: STRUCTURAL, FUNCTIONAL, AND MECHANISTIC ASPECTS.

Tatiana Bilova; Elena Lukasheva; Dominic Brauch; Uta Greifenhagen; Gagan Paudel; Elena Tarakhovskaya; Nadezhda Frolova; Juliane Mittasch; Gerd Ulrich Balcke; Alain Tissier; Natalia Osmolovskaya; Thomas Vogt; Ludger A. Wessjohann; Claudia Birkemeyer; Carsten Milkowski; Andrej Frolov

Glycation is the reaction of carbonyl compounds (reducing sugars and α-dicarbonyls) with amino acids, lipids, and proteins, yielding early and advanced glycation end products (AGEs). The AGEs can be formed via degradation of early glycation intermediates (glycoxidation) and by interaction with the products of monosaccharide autoxidation (autoxidative glycosylation). Although formation of these potentially deleterious compounds is well characterized in animal systems and thermally treated foods, only a little information about advanced glycation in plants is available. Thus, the knowledge of the plant AGE patterns and the underlying pathways of their formation are completely missing. To fill this gap, we describe the AGE-modified proteome of Brassica napus and characterize individual sites of advanced glycation by the methods of liquid chromatography-based bottom-up proteomics. The modification patterns were complex but reproducible: 789 AGE-modified peptides in 772 proteins were detected in two independent experiments. In contrast, only 168 polypeptides contained early glycated lysines, which did not resemble the sites of advanced glycation. Similar observations were made with Arabidopsis thaliana. The absence of the early glycated precursors of the AGE-modified protein residues indicated autoxidative glycosylation, but not glycoxidation, as the major pathway of AGE formation. To prove this assumption and to identify the potential modifying agents, we estimated the reactivity and glycative potential of plant-derived sugars using a model peptide approach and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based techniques. Evaluation of these data sets together with the assessed tissue carbohydrate contents revealed dihydroxyacetone phosphate, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, ribulose, erythrose, and sucrose as potential precursors of plant AGEs.


Journal of Plant Physiology | 2017

Early responses of mature Arabidopsis thaliana plants to reduced water potential in the agar-based polyethylene glycol infusion drought model

Andrej Frolov; Tatiana Bilova; Gagan Paudel; Robert Berger; Gerd Ulrich Balcke; Claudia Birkemeyer; Ludger A. Wessjohann

Drought is one of the most important environmental stressors resulting in increasing losses of crop plant productivity all over the world. Therefore, development of new approaches to increase the stress tolerance of crop plants is strongly desired. This requires precise and adequate modeling of drought stress. As this type of stress manifests itself as a steady decrease in the substrate water potential (ψw), agar plates infused with polyethylene glycol (PEG) are the perfect experimental tool: they are easy in preparation and provide a constantly reduced ψw, which is not possible in soil models. However, currently, this model is applicable only to seedlings and cannot be used for evaluation of stress responses in mature plants, which are obviously the most appropriate objects for drought tolerance research. To overcome this limitation, here we introduce a PEG-based agar infusion model suitable for 6-8-week-old A. thaliana plants, and characterize, to the best of our knowledge for the first time, the early drought stress responses of adult plants grown on PEG-infused agar. We describe essential alterations in the primary metabolome (sugars and related compounds, amino acids and polyamines) accompanied by qualitative and quantitative changes in protein patterns: up to 87 unique stress-related proteins were annotated under drought stress conditions, whereas further 84 proteins showed a change in abundance. The obtained proteome patterns differed slightly from those reported for seedlings and soil-based models.

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Elena Tarakhovskaya

Saint Petersburg State University

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Tatiana Bilova

Saint Petersburg State University

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