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Featured researches published by Frank Sielaff.


Journal of Virology | 2010

Cleavage of Influenza Virus Hemagglutinin by Airway Proteases TMPRSS2 and HAT Differs in Subcellular Localization and Susceptibility to Protease Inhibitors

Eva Böttcher-Friebertshäuser; Catharina Freuer; Frank Sielaff; Sarah Schmidt; Markus Eickmann; Jennifer Uhlendorff; Torsten Steinmetzer; Hans-Dieter Klenk; Wolfgang Garten

ABSTRACT Proteolytic cleavage of the influenza virus surface glycoprotein hemagglutinin (HA) by host cell proteases is crucial for infectivity and virus spread. The proteases HAT (human airway trypsin-like protease) and TMPRSS2 (transmembrane protease serine S1 member 2) known to be present in the human airways were previously identified as proteases that cleave HA. We studied subcellular localization of HA cleavage and cleavage inhibition of seasonal influenza virus A/Memphis/14/96 (H1N1) and pandemic virus A/Hamburg/5/2009 (H1N1) in MDCK cells that express HAT and TMPRSS2 under doxycycline-induced transcriptional activation. We made the following observations: (i) HA is cleaved by membrane-bound TMPRSS2 and HAT and not by soluble forms released into the supernatant; (ii) HAT cleaves newly synthesized HA before or during the release of progeny virions and HA of incoming viruses prior to endocytosis at the cell surface, whereas TMPRSS2 cleaves newly synthesized HA within the cell and is not able to support the proteolytic activation of HA of incoming virions; and (iii) cleavage activation of HA and virus spread in TMPRSS2- and HAT-expressing cells can be suppressed by peptide mimetic protease inhibitors. The further development of these inhibitors could lead to new drugs for influenza treatment.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Potent inhibitors of furin and furin-like proprotein convertases containing decarboxylated P1 arginine mimetics

Gero L. Becker; Frank Sielaff; Manuel E. Than; Iris Lindberg; Sophie Routhier; Robert Day; Yinghui Lu; Wolfgang Garten; Torsten Steinmetzer

Furin belongs to the family of proprotein convertases (PCs) and is involved in numerous normal physiological and pathogenic processes, such as viral propagation, bacterial toxin activation, cancer, and metastasis. Furin and related furin-like PCs cleave their substrates at characteristic multibasic consensus sequences, preferentially after an arginine residue. By incorporating decarboxylated arginine mimetics in the P1 position of substrate analogue peptidic inhibitors, we could identify highly potent furin inhibitors. The most potent compound, phenylacetyl-Arg-Val-Arg-4-amidinobenzylamide (15), inhibits furin with a K(i) value of 0.81 nM and has also comparable affinity to other PCs like PC1/3, PACE4, and PC5/6, whereas PC2 and PC7 or trypsin-like serine proteases were poorly affected. In fowl plague virus (influenza A, H7N1)-infected MDCK cells, inhibitor 15 inhibited proteolytic hemagglutinin cleavage and was able to reduce virus propagation in a long-term infection test. Molecular modeling revealed several key interactions of the 4-amidinobenzylamide residue in the S1 pocket of furin contributing to the excellent affinity of these inhibitors.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Ligand binding stepwise disrupts water network in thrombin: enthalpic and entropic changes reveal classical hydrophobic effect

Adam Biela; Frank Sielaff; Felix Terwesten; Andreas Heine; Torsten Steinmetzer; Gerhard Klebe

Well-ordered water molecules are displaced from thrombins hydrophobic S3/4-pocket by P3-varied ligands (Gly, d-Ala, d-Val, d-Leu to d-Cha with increased hydrophobicity and steric requirement). Two series with 2-(aminomethyl)-5-chlorobenzylamide and 4-amidinobenzylamide at P1 were examined by ITC and crystallography. Although experiencing different interactions in S1, they display almost equal potency. For both scaffolds the terminal benzylsulfonyl substituent differs in binding, whereas the increasingly bulky P3-groups address S3/4 pocket similarly. Small substituents leave the solvation pattern unperturbed as found in the uncomplexed enzyme while increasingly larger ones stepwise displace the waters. Medium-sized groups show patterns with partially occupied waters. The overall 40-fold affinity enhancement correlates with water displacement and growing number of van der Waals contacts and is mainly attributed to favorable entropy. Both Gly derivatives deviate from the series and adopt different binding modes. Nonetheless, their thermodynamic signatures are virtually identical with the homologous d-Ala derivatives. Accordingly, unchanged thermodynamic profiles are no reliable indicator for conserved binding modes.


Biochemical Journal | 2013

Identification of the first synthetic inhibitors of the type II transmembrane serine protease TMPRSS2 suitable for inhibition of influenza virus activation.

Daniela Meyer; Frank Sielaff; Maya Hammami; Eva Böttcher-Friebertshäuser; Wolfgang Garten; Torsten Steinmetzer

TMPRSS2 (transmembrane serine proteinase 2) is a multidomain type II transmembrane serine protease that cleaves the surface glycoprotein HA (haemagglutinin) of influenza viruses with a monobasic cleavage site, which is a prerequisite for virus fusion and propagation. Furthermore, it activates the fusion protein F of the human metapneumovirus and the spike protein S of the SARS-CoV (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus). Increased TMPRSS2 expression was also described in several tumour entities. Therefore TMPRSS2 emerged as a potential target for drug design. The catalytic domain of TMPRSS2 was expressed in Escherichia coli and used for an inhibitor screen with previously synthesized inhibitors of various trypsin-like serine proteases. Two inhibitor types were identified which inhibit TMPRSS2 in the nanomolar range. The first series comprises substrate analogue inhibitors containing a 4-amidinobenzylamide moiety at the P1 position, whereby some of these analogues possess inhibition constants of approximately 20 nM. An improved potency was found for a second type derived from sulfonylated 3-amindinophenylalanylamide derivatives. The most potent derivative of this series inhibits TMPRSS2 with a K(i) value of 0.9 nM and showed an efficient blockage of influenza virus propagation in human airway epithelial cells. On the basis of the inhibitor studies, a series of new fluorogenic substrates containing a D-arginine residue at the P3 position was synthesized, some of them were efficiently cleaved by TMPRSS2.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Development of substrate analogue inhibitors for the human airway trypsin-like protease HAT

Frank Sielaff; Eva Böttcher-Friebertshäuser; Daniela Meyer; Sebastian M. Saupe; Ines M. Volk; Wolfgang Garten; Torsten Steinmetzer

A series of substrate analogue inhibitors of the serine protease HAT, containing a 4-amidinobenzylamide moiety as the P1 residue, was prepared. The most potent compounds possess a basic amino acid in the d-configuration as P3 residue. Whereas inhibitor 4 (K(i) 13 nM) containing proline as the P2 residue completely lacks selectivity, incorporation of norvaline leads to a potent inhibitor (15, K(i) 15 nM) with improved selectivity for HAT in comparison to the coagulation proteases thrombin and factor Xa or the fibrinolytic plasmin. Selected inhibitors were able to suppress influenza virus replication in a HAT-expressing MDCK cell model.


Vaccine | 2012

Hemagglutinin activating host cell proteases provide promising drug targets for the treatment of influenza A and B virus infections

Eva Böttcher-Friebertshäuser; Yinghui Lu; Daniela Meyer; Frank Sielaff; Torsten Steinmetzer; Hans-Dieter Klenk; Wolfgang Garten

Cleavage of the influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) by host cell proteases is crucial for infectivity and spread of the virus. Some years ago, we identified TMPRSS2 and HAT from human airways as activating proteases of influenza A viruses containing a monobasic HA cleavage site. Therefore, these proteases are considered as potential drug targets. In this report, first we show that HA of influenza B virus is activated by TMPRSS2 and HAT, too. We further demonstrate that benzylsulfonyl-d-arginine-proline-4-amidinobenzylamide (BAPA), which is a potent inhibitor of HAT and TMPRSS2, efficiently suppresses virus propagation in TMPRSS2-expressing human airway epithelial cells by inhibition of HA cleavage. BAPA treatment reduced virus titers of different influenza A and B viruses more than 1000-fold and delayed virus propagation by 24-48 h at non-cytotoxic concentrations. A combination of BAPA with the neuraminidase (NA) inhibitor oseltamivir carboxylate efficiently blocked influenza virus replication in airway epithelial cells at remarkable lower concentrations for each compound than treatment with either inhibitor alone. Our studies provide a novel and potent approach for influenza chemotherapy that should be considered for influenza treatment.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

New furin inhibitors based on weakly basic amidinohydrazones.

Frank Sielaff; Manuel E. Than; Dorian Bevec; Iris Lindberg; Torsten Steinmetzer

A novel series of amidinohydrazone-derived furin inhibitors was prepared; the most potent compounds 17 and 21 inhibit furin with K(i) values of 0.46 and 0.59μM, respectively. In contrast to inhibitor 17, which still contains a guanidino residue, compound 21 possesses only weakly basic amidinohydrazone groups.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014

Impact of protein and ligand impurities on ITC-derived protein–ligand thermodynamics

Stefan Grüner; Manuel Neeb; Luzi Jakob Barandun; Frank Sielaff; Christoph Hohn; Shun Kojima; Torsten Steinmetzer; François Diederich; Gerhard Klebe

BACKGROUND The thermodynamic characterization of protein-ligand interactions by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) is a powerful tool in drug design, giving valuable insight into the interaction driving forces. ITC is thought to require protein and ligand solutions of high quality, meaning both the absence of contaminants as well as accurately determined concentrations. METHODS Ligands synthesized to deviating purity and protein of different pureness were titrated by ITC. Data curation was attempted also considering information from analytical techniques to correct stoichiometry. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS We used trypsin and tRNA-guanine transglycosylase (TGT), together with high affinity ligands to investigate the effect of errors in protein concentration as well as the impact of ligand impurities on the apparent thermodynamics. We found that errors in protein concentration did not change the thermodynamic properties obtained significantly. However, most ligand impurities led to pronounced changes in binding enthalpy. If protein binding of the respective impurity is not expected, the actual ligand concentration was corrected for and the thus revised data compared to thermodynamic properties obtained with the respective pure ligand. Even in these cases, we observed differences in binding enthalpy of about 4kJ⋅mol(-1), which is considered significant. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE Our results indicate that ligand purity is the critical parameter to monitor if accurate thermodynamic data of a protein-ligand complex are to be recorded. Furthermore, artificially changing fitting parameters to obtain a sound interaction stoichiometry in the presence of uncharacterized ligand impurities may lead to thermodynamic parameters significantly deviating from the accurate thermodynamic signature.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2012

Quantifying Protein-Ligand Binding Constants using Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry: A Systematic Binding Affinity Study of a Series of Hydrophobically Modified Trypsin Inhibitors

Dragana Cubrilovic; Adam Biela; Frank Sielaff; Torsten Steinmetzer; Gerhard Klebe; Renato Zenobi


Archive | 2010

Use of hat inhibitors and tmprss2 inhibitors as medicaments

Torsten Steinmetzer; Frank Sielaff; Wolfgang Garten; Eva Böttcher; Catharina Freuer; Mikhail Matrosovich; Tatyana Matrosovich

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