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Dive into the research topics where Dietmar Schummer is active.

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Featured researches published by Dietmar Schummer.


BMC Microbiology | 2010

Damage of Streptococcus mutans biofilms by carolacton, a secondary metabolite from the myxobacterium Sorangium cellulosum

Brigitte Kunze; Michael Reck; Andreas Dötsch; André Lemme; Dietmar Schummer; Herbert Irschik; Heinrich Steinmetz; Irene Wagner-Döbler

BackgroundStreptococcus mutans is a major pathogen in human dental caries. One of its important virulence properties is the ability to form biofilms (dental plaque) on tooth surfaces. Eradication of such biofilms is extremely difficult. We therefore screened a library of secondary metabolites from myxobacteria for their ability to damage biofilms of S. mutans.ResultsHere we show that carolacton, a secondary metabolite isolated from Sorangium cellulosum, has high antibacterial activity against biofilms of S. mutans. Planktonic growth of bacteria was only slightly impaired and no acute cytotoxicity against mouse fibroblasts could be observed. Carolacton caused death of S. mutans biofilm cells, elongation of cell chains, and changes in cell morphology. At a concentration of 10 nM carolacton, biofilm damage was already at 35% under anaerobic conditions. A knock-out mutant for comD, encoding a histidine kinase specific for the competence stimulating peptide (CSP), was slightly less sensitive to carolacton than the wildtype. Expression of the competence related alternate sigma factor ComX was strongly reduced by carolacton, as determined by a pcomX luciferase reporter strain.ConclusionsCarolacton possibly interferes with the density dependent signalling systems in S. mutans and may represent a novel approach for the prevention of dental caries.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Discovery, Structure Elucidation, and Biological Characterization of Nannocystin A, a Macrocyclic Myxobacterial Metabolite with Potent Antiproliferative Properties

Holger Hoffmann; Herbert Kogler; Winfried Heyse; Hans Matter; Michael Caspers; Dietmar Schummer; Christine Klemke-Jahn; Armin Bauer; Geraldine Penarier; Laurent Debussche; Mark Brönstrup

Microbial natural products are a rich source of bioactive molecules to serve as drug leads and/or biological tools. We investigated a little-explored myxobacterial genus, Nannocystis sp., and discovered a novel 21-membered macrocyclic scaffold that is composed of a tripeptide and a polyketide part with an epoxyamide moiety. The relative and absolute configurations of the nine stereocenters was determined by NMR spectroscopy, molecular dynamics calculations, chemical degradation, and X-ray crystallography. The compound, named nannocystin A (1), was found to inhibit cell proliferation at low nanomolar concentrations through the early induction of apoptosis. The mode of action of 1 could not be matched to that of standard drugs by transcriptional profiling and biochemical experiments. An initial investigation of the structure-activity relationship based on seven analogues demonstrated the importance of the epoxide moiety for high activity.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 1998

Oxidative and reductive transformations of epothilone A

Michael Sefkow; Michael Kiffe; Dietmar Schummer; Gerhard Höfle

The C7 hydroxy group of cytotoxic epothilone A was selectively oxidized using PDC. A selective oxidation of the C3 hydroxy group was accomplished with Me2S/(PhCO2)2 after in situ protection of C7-OH. Reduction of epothilone A or of a C5, C7 dioxo derivative with NaBH4 proceeded at the C5 carbonyl group. Oxidation and hydrogenation of the C16-C17 double bond proved to be difficult but it was easily cleaved with ozone and the resulting keto derivative was transformed to epothilone analogs with different side chains.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Biosynthetic Studies of Telomycin Reveal New Lipopeptides with Enhanced Activity.

Chengzhang Fu; Lena Keller; Armin Bauer; Mark Brönstrup; Alexandre Froidbise; Peter Dr. Hammann; Jennifer Herrmann; Guillaume Mondésert; Michael Kurz; Matthias Schiell; Dietmar Schummer; Luigi Toti; Joachim Wink; Rolf Müller

Telomycin (TEM) is a cyclic depsipeptide antibiotic active against Gram-positive bacteria. In this study, five new natural telomycin analogues produced by Streptomyces canus ATCC 12646 were identified. To understand the biosynthetic machinery of telomycin and to generate more analogues by pathway engineering, the TEM biosynthesis gene cluster has been characterized from S. canus ATCC 12646: it spans approximately 80.5 kb and consists of 34 genes encoding fatty acid ligase, nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs), regulators, transporters, and tailoring enzymes. The gene cluster was heterologously expressed in Streptomyces albus J1074 setting the stage for convenient biosynthetic engineering, mutasynthesis, and production optimization. Moreover, in-frame deletions of one hydroxylase and two P450 monooxygenase genes resulted in the production of novel telomycin derivatives, revealing these genes to be responsible for the specific modification by hydroxylation of three amino acids found in the TEM backbone. Surprisingly, natural lipopeptide telomycin precursors were identified when characterizing an unusual precursor deacylation mechanism during telomycin maturation. By in vivo gene inactivation and in vitro biochemical characterization of the recombinant enzyme Tem25, the maturation process was shown to involve the cleavage of previously unknown telomycin precursor-lipopeptides, to yield 6-methylheptanoic acid and telomycins. These lipopeptides were isolated from an inactivation mutant of tem25 encoding a (de)acylase, structurally elucidated, and then shown to be deacylated by recombinant Tem25. The TEM precursor and several semisynthetic lipopeptide TEM derivatives showed rapid bactericidal killing and were active against several multidrug-resistant (MDR) Gram-positive pathogens, opening the path to future chemical optimization of telomycin for pharmaceutical application.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Production of the Bengamide Class of Marine Natural Products in Myxobacteria: Biosynthesis and Structure–Activity Relationships

Silke C. Wenzel; Holger Hoffmann; Jidong Zhang; Laurent Debussche; Sabine Haag-Richter; Michael Kurz; Frederico Nardi; Peer Lukat; Irene Kochems; Heiko Tietgen; Dietmar Schummer; Jean-Paul Nicolas; Loreley Calvet; Valerie Czepczor; Patricia Vrignaud; Agnes Mühlenweg; Stefan Pelzer; Rolf Müller; Mark Brönstrup

The bengamides, sponge-derived natural products that have been characterized as inhibitors of methionine aminopeptidases (MetAPs), have been intensively investigated as anticancer compounds. We embarked on a multidisciplinary project to supply bengamides by fermentation of the terrestrial myxobacterium M. virescens, decipher their biosynthesis, and optimize their properties as drug leads. The characterization of the biosynthetic pathway revealed that bacterial resistance to bengamides is conferred by Leu 154 of the myxobacterial MetAP protein, and enabled transfer of the entire gene cluster into the more suitable production host M. xanthus DK1622. A combination of semisynthesis of microbially derived bengamides and total synthesis resulted in an optimized derivative that combined high cellular potency in the nanomolar range with high metabolic stability, which translated to an improved half-life in mice and antitumor efficacy in a melanoma mouse model.


Tetrahedron | 1995

An improved preparation of tris(ethylenedioxyboryl)methane, a reagent for the homologation of aldehydes and ketones

Dietmar Schummer; Gerhard Höfle

Abstract The preparation of tris(ethylenedioxyboryl)methane ( 2 ), the reagent for the only known homologation of aldehydes and ketones under non-acidic conditions, was improved by avoiding the difficult isolation of the intermediate tris(dimethoxyboryl)methane ( 1 ) and by direct crystallization of 2 .


The Journal of Antibiotics | 1995

The tartrolons, new boron-containing antibiotics from a myxobacterium, Sorangium cellulosum

Herbert Irschik; Dietmar Schummer; Klaus Gerth; Gerhard Höfle; Hans Reichenbach


Journal of Natural Products | 2007

Etnangien, a Macrolide-Polyene Antibiotic from Sorangium cellulosum That Inhibits Nucleic Acid Polymerases

Herbert Irschik; Dietmar Schummer; Gerhard Höfle; Hans Reichenbach; and Heinrich Steinmetz; Rolf Jansen


European Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2010

Carolacton - A macrolide ketocarbonic acid that reduces biofilm formation by the caries- and endocarditis-associated bacterium Streptococcus mutans

Rolf Jansen; Herbert Irschik; Volker Huch; Dietmar Schummer; Heinrich Steinmetz; Martin Bock; Thomas Schmidt; Andreas Kirschning; Rolf Müller


The Journal of Antibiotics | 2003

Coniosetin, a Novel Tetramic Acid Antibiotic from Coniochaeta ellipsoidea DSM 13856

Marian Paul Segeth; Alain Bonnefoy; Mark Brönstrup; Martin Knauf; Dietmar Schummer; Luigi Toti; Laszlo Vertesy; Marie-Cécile Wetzel-Raynal; Joachim Wink; Gerhard Seibert

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Gerhard Höfle

Technical University of Berlin

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Michael Kurz

Illinois State University

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