Frederik Teilfeldt Hansen
Aarhus University
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Featured researches published by Frederik Teilfeldt Hansen.
International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2012
Frederik Teilfeldt Hansen; Jens Sörensen; Henriette Giese; Teis Esben Sondergaard; Rasmus John Normand Frandsen
Fusarium species produce a plethora of bioactive polyketides and nonribosomal peptides that give rise to health problems in animals and may have drug development potential. Using the genome sequences for Fusarium graminearum, F. oxysporum, F. solani and F. verticillioides we developed a framework for future polyketide synthases (PKSs) and nonribosomal peptides synthetases (NRPSs) nomenclature assignment and classification. Sequence similarities of the adenylation and ketosynthase domain sequences were used to group the identified NRPS and PKS genes. We present the current state of knowledge of PKS and NRPS genes in sequenced Fusarium species and their known products. With the rapid increase in the number of sequenced fungal genomes a systematic classification will greatly aid the scientific community in obtaining an overview of the number of different NRPS and PKS genes and their potential as producers of known bioactive compounds.
Environmental Microbiology | 2012
Jens Sörensen; Frederik Teilfeldt Hansen; Teis Esben Sondergaard; Dan Staerk; T. Verne Lee; Reinhard Wimmer; Louise Graabæk Klitgaard; Stig Purup; Henriette Giese; Rasmus John Normand Frandsen
Like many other filamentous fungi, Fusarium graminearum has the genetic potential to produce a vast array of unknown secondary metabolites. A promising approach to determine the nature of these is to activate silent secondary metabolite gene clusters through constitutive expression of cluster specific transcription factors. We have developed a system in which an expression cassette containing the transcription factor from the targeted PKS cluster disrupts the production of the red mycelium pigment aurofusarin. This aids with identification of mutants as they appear as white colonies and metabolite analyses where aurofusarin and its intermediates are normally among the most abundant compounds. The system was used for constitutive expression of the local transcription factor from the PKS9 cluster (renamed FSL) leading to production of three novel fusarielins, F, G and H. This group of compounds has not previously been reported from F. graminearum or linked to a biosynthetic gene in any fungal species. The toxicity of the three novel fusarielins was examined against colorectal cancer cell lines where fusarielin H was more potent than fusarielin F and G.
Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2015
Frederik Teilfeldt Hansen; Donald M. Gardiner; Erik Lysøe; Patricia Romans Fuertes; Bettina Tudzynski; Philipp Wiemann; Teis Esben Sondergaard; Henriette Giese; Ditlev E. Brodersen; Jens Sörensen
Members of the genus Fusarium produce a plethora of bioactive secondary metabolites, which can be harmful to humans and animals or have potential in drug development. In this study we have performed comparative analyses of polyketide synthases (PKSs) and non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) from ten different Fusarium species including F. graminearum (two strains), F. verticillioides, F. solani, F. culmorum, F. pseudograminearum, F. fujikuroi, F. acuminatum, F. avenaceum, F. equiseti, and F. oxysporum (12 strains). This led to identification of 52 NRPS and 52 PKSs orthology groups, respectively, and although not all PKSs and NRPSs are assumed to be intact or functional, the analyses illustrate the huge secondary metabolite potential in Fusarium. In our analyses we identified a core collection of eight NRPSs (NRPS2-4, 6, 10-13) and two PKSs (PKS3 and PKS7) that are conserved in all strains analyzed in this study. The identified PKSs and NRPSs were named based on a previously developed classification system (www.FusariumNRPSPKS.dk). We suggest this system be used when PKSs and NRPSs have to be classified in future sequenced Fusarium strains. This system will facilitate identification of orthologous and non-orthologous NRPSs and PKSs from newly sequenced Fusarium genomes and will aid the scientific community by providing a common nomenclature for these two groups of genes/enzymes.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Jesper S. Oeemig; Carina Lynggaard; Daniel H. Knudsen; Frederik Teilfeldt Hansen; Kent D. Nørgaard; Tanja Schneider; Brian S. Vad; Dorthe Sandvang; Line A. Nielsen; Søren Neve; Hans-Henrik Kristensen; Hans-Georg Sahl; Daniel E. Otzen; Reinhard Wimmer
Background: Antimicrobial peptides are new antibiotics avoiding resistance problems. Results: Eurocin is a new antimicrobial peptide featuring a cysteine-stabilized αβ-fold. Eurocin binds the cell wall precursor lipid II but does not disrupt cell membranes. Conclusion: Eurocin acts by inhibiting cell wall synthesis. Its structure is typical for invertebrate defensins. Significance: Knowing the mode of action and structure is a prerequisite for pharmaceutical application of an antibiotic. Antimicrobial peptides are a new class of antibiotics that are promising for pharmaceutical applications because they have retained efficacy throughout evolution. One class of antimicrobial peptides are the defensins, which have been found in different species. Here we describe a new fungal defensin, eurocin. Eurocin acts against a range of Gram-positive human pathogens but not against Gram-negative bacteria. Eurocin consists of 42 amino acids, forming a cysteine-stabilized α/β-fold. The thermal denaturation data point shows the disulfide bridges being responsible for the stability of the fold. Eurocin does not form pores in cell membranes at physiologically relevant concentrations; it does, however, lead to limited leakage of a fluorophore from small unilamellar vesicles. Eurocin interacts with detergent micelles, and it inhibits the synthesis of cell walls by binding equimolarly to the cell wall precursor lipid II.
Toxicology Letters | 2011
Teis Esben Sondergaard; Frederik Teilfeldt Hansen; Stig Purup; A.K. Nielsen; Eva Cecilie Bonefeld-Jørgensen; Henriette Giese; Jens Sörensen
Fusarin C is a mycotoxin produced by several Fusarium species and has been associated with esophageal cancer due to its carcinogenic effects. Here, we report that fusarin C stimulates growth of the breast cancer cell line MCF-7. This suggests that fusarin C can act as an estrogenic agonist and should be classified as a mycoestrogen. MCF-7 cells were stimulated in the range between 0.1 and 20μM and inhibited when the concentration exceeded 50μM. The toxicity of fusarin C is comparable to other mycoestrogens such as zearalenone, but the chemical structure of fusarin C is very different from other known estrogen agonists. Furthermore, the toxicity of fusarin C was tested in five additional human cell lines Caco 2, U266, PC3, MDA-MB-231 and MCF-10a which were all inhibited when the concentration of fusarin C exceeded 10μM. To the best of our knowledge this is the first report on the mycoestrogenic properties of fusarin C.
Journal of Natural Products | 2014
Jens Sörensen; Teis Esben Sondergaard; Lorenzo Covarelli; Patricia Romans Fuertes; Frederik Teilfeldt Hansen; Rasmus John Normand Frandsen; Wagma Saei; Mie Bech Lukassen; Reinhard Wimmer; Kristian Fog Nielsen; Donald M. Gardiner; Henriette Giese
The closely related species Fusarium graminearum and Fusarium pseudograminearum differ in that each contains a gene cluster with a polyketide synthase (PKS) and a nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) that is not present in the other species. To identify their products, we deleted PKS6 and NRPS7 in F. graminearum and NRPS32 in F. pseudograminearum. By comparing the secondary metabolite profiles of the strains we identified the resulting product in F. graminearum as fusaristatin A, and as W493 A and B in F. pseudograminearum. These lipopeptides have previously been isolated from unidentified Fusarium species. On the basis of genes in the putative gene clusters we propose a model for biosynthesis where the polyketide product is shuttled to the NPRS via a CoA ligase and a thioesterase in F. pseudograminearum. In F. graminearum the polyketide is proposed to be directly assimilated by the NRPS.
Fungal Biology | 2012
Frederik Teilfeldt Hansen; Aida Droce; Jens Sörensen; Peter Fojan; Henriette Giese; Teis Esben Sondergaard
The plant pathogen Fusarium graminearum is the infamous cause of Fusarium head blight worldwide resulting in significant losses of yield and reduced grain feed quality. It also has the potential to produce a range of small bioactive peptides produced by the non ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs). Most of these are unknown as F. graminearum contains 19 NRPS encoding genes, but only three have been assigned products. For the first time, we use deletion and overexpression mutants to investigate the functions and product of NRPS4 in F. graminearum. Deletion of NRPS4 homologues in Alternaria brassicicola and Cochloibolus heterostrophus has been shown to result in mutants unable to repel water. In a time study of surface hydrophobicity we observed that water droplets could penetrate 7 d old colonies of the NRPS4 deletion mutants. Loss in ability to repel water was first observed on 13 d old cultures of the wild type strain, whereas the overexpression strain remained water repellant throughout the 38 d time study. The conidia of both mutants were examined and those of the overexpression mutant showed distinct morphological differences in form of collapsed cells. These observations might suggest that the peptide product of NRPS4 could be an architectural factor in the cell walls of Fusarium or an indirect regulator of hydrophobicity.
Bioinformatics | 2016
Michael Knudsen; Dan Søndergaard; Claus Tofting-Olesen; Frederik Teilfeldt Hansen; Ditlev E. Brodersen; Christian N. S. Pedersen
MOTIVATION By using a class of large modular enzymes known as Non-Ribosomal Peptide Synthetases (NRPS), bacteria and fungi are capable of synthesizing a large variety of secondary metabolites, many of which are bioactive and have potential, pharmaceutical applications as e.g. antibiotics. There is thus an interest in predicting the compound synthesized by an NRPS from its primary structure (amino acid sequence) alone, as this would enable an in silico search of whole genomes for NRPS enzymes capable of synthesizing potentially useful compounds. RESULTS NRPS synthesis happens in a conveyor belt-like fashion where each individual NRPS module is responsible for incorporating a specific substrate (typically an amino acid) into the final product. Here, we present a new method for predicting substrate specificities of individual NRPS modules based on occurrences of motifs in their primary structures. We compare our classifier with existing methods and discuss possible biological explanations of how the motifs might relate to substrate specificity. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION SEQL-NRPS is available as a web service implemented in Python with Flask at http://services.birc.au.dk/seql-nrps and source code available at https://bitbucket.org/dansondergaard/seql-nrps/. CONTACT [email protected] or [email protected] SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
Archive | 2014
Jens Sörensen; Michael Knudsen; Frederik Teilfeldt Hansen; Claus Olesen; Patricia Romans Fuertes; T. Verne Lee; Teis Esben Sondergaard; Christian N. S. Pedersen; Ditlev E. Brodersen; Henriette Giese
Iron is an essential, yet often limiting element for the growth of many organisms. In response to iron limitation, fungi have developed siderophores that provide a high-affinity iron uptake system and safe intracellular storage and transport mechanisms to gain a competitive advantage. Here, we discuss the function of siderophores in relation to fungal iron uptake mechanisms and their importance for coexistence with host organisms. The chemical nature of the major groups of siderophores and their regulation is described along with the function and architecture of the large multi-domain enzymes responsible for siderophore synthesis, namely the non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs). Finally, we present the most recent advances in our understanding of the structural biology of fungal NRPSs and discuss opportunities for the development of a fungal NRPS prediction server.
Current Genetics | 2016
Patricia Romans-Fuertes; Teis Esben Sondergaard; Manuela Ilse Helga Sandmann; Rasmus Dam Wollenberg; Kristian Fog Nielsen; Frederik Teilfeldt Hansen; Henriette Giese; Ditlev E. Brodersen; Jens Sörensen
Sansalvamide is a cyclic pentadepsipeptide produced by Fusarium solani and has shown promising results as potential anti-cancer drug. The biosynthetic pathway has until now remained unidentified, but here we used an Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation (ATMT) approach to generate knockout mutants of two candidate non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS29 and NRPS30). Comparative studies of secondary metabolites in the two deletion mutants and wild type confirmed the absence of sansalvamide in the NRPS30 deletion mutant, implicating this synthetase in the biosynthetic pathway for sansalvamide. Sansalvamide is structurally related to the cyclic hexadepsipeptide destruxin, which both contain an α-hydroxyisocaproic acid (HICA) unit. A gene cluster responsible for destruxin production has previously been identified in Metarhizium robertsii together with a hypothetical biosynthetic pathway. Using comparative bioinformatic analyses of the catalytic domains in the destruxin and sansalvamide NRPSs, we were able to propose a model for sansalvamide biosynthesis. Orthologues of the gene clusters were also identified in species from several other genera including Acremonium chrysogenum and Trichoderma virens, which suggests that the ability to produce compounds related to destruxin and sansalvamide is widespread.