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Dive into the research topics where Johannes Zuegg is active.

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Featured researches published by Johannes Zuegg.


Bioinformatics | 2004

A probabilistic measure for alignment-free sequence comparison

Tuan D. Pham; Johannes Zuegg

MOTIVATION Alignment-free sequence comparison methods are still in the early stages of development compared to those of alignment-based sequence analysis. In this paper, we introduce a probabilistic measure of similarity between two biological sequences without alignment. The method is based on the concept of comparing the similarity/dissimilarity between two constructed Markov models. RESULTS The method was tested against six DNA sequences, which are the thrA, thrB and thrC genes of the threonine operons from Escherichia coli K-12 and from Shigella flexneri; and one random sequence having the same base composition as thrA from E.coli. These results were compared with those obtained from CLUSTAL W algorithm (alignment-based) and the chaos game representation (alignment-free). The method was further tested against a more complex set of 40 DNA sequences and compared with other existing sequence similarity measures (alignment-free). AVAILABILITY All datasets and computer codes written in MATLAB are available upon request from the first author.


Drug Discovery Today | 2003

Molecular diversity through sugar scaffolds.

Giang Thanh Le; Giovanni Abbenante; Bernd Becker; Matthias Grathwohl; Judy Halliday; Gerry Tometzki; Johannes Zuegg; Wim Meutermans

Monosaccharides provide an excellent platform to tailor molecular diversity by appending desired substituents at selected positions around the sugar scaffold. The presence of five functionalized and stereo-controlled centres on the sugar scaffolds gives the chemist plenty of scope to custom design molecules to a pharmacophore model. This review focuses on the peptidomimetic developments in this area, as well as the concept of tailoring structural and functional diversity in a library using carbohydrate scaffolds and how this can lead to increased hit rates and rapid identification of leads, which has promising prospects for drug development.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2014

Imperfect coordination chemistry facilitates metal ion release in the Psa permease

Rafael M. Couñago; Miranda P. Ween; Stephanie L. Begg; Megha Bajaj; Johannes Zuegg; Megan L. O'Mara; Matthew A. Cooper; Alastair G. McEwan; James C. Paton; Bostjan Kobe; Christopher A. McDevitt

The relative stability of divalent first-row transition metal ion complexes, as defined by the Irving-Williams series, poses a fundamental chemical challenge for selectivity in bacterial metal ion acquisition. Here we show that although the substrate-binding protein of Streptococcus pneumoniae, PsaA, is finely attuned to bind its physiological substrate manganese, it can also bind a broad range of other divalent transition metal cations. By combining high-resolution structural data, metal-binding assays and mutational analyses, we show that the inability of open-state PsaA to satisfy the preferred coordination chemistry of manganese enables the protein to undergo the conformational changes required for cargo release to the Psa permease. This is specific for manganese ions, whereas zinc ions remain bound to PsaA. Collectively, these findings suggest a new ligand binding and release mechanism for PsaA and related substrate-binding proteins that facilitate specificity for divalent cations during competition from zinc ions, which are more abundant in biological systems.


Journal of Molecular Catalysis B-enzymatic | 1997

Selectivity of lipases: Conformational analysis of suggested intermediates in ester hydrolysis of chiral primary and secondary alcohols

Johannes Zuegg; Helmut Hönig; J.D. Schrag; M. Cygler

Abstract Conformational analysis of the proposed tetrahedral transition state of different model esters in the active sites of the lipases of Candida rugosa and Pseudomonas cepacia are used to analyze structural reasons for the unique enantiomeric preference of lipases towards the cleavage of esters of chiral primary and secondary alcohols. The results are compared with the existing rules for the preference of one specific enantiomer in the hydrolysis of esters of chiral alcohols. Interesting results on the dynamics behaviour of some enantiomers within the lipases are reported.


Journal of Molecular Catalysis B-enzymatic | 1997

Molecular reasons for lipase-sensitivity against acetaldehyde

Hedda K. Weber; Johannes Zuegg; Kurt Faber; J. Pleissb

Abstract The molecular reasons for the sensitivity of microbial lipases towards acetaldehyde, emerging as unavoidable by-product from acyl transfer reactions employing vinyl esters as acyl donors, were shown to be associated with specific properties of lysine residues. Since the mechanism of deactivation involves the formation of Schiff bases at the lysine e-amino groups, the relative reactivity (i.e. nucleophilicity) of each residue was estimated by using an electronic (p K a value) and a steric parameter (accessible surface area of the side chain). Sensitive lipases, as from Candida rugosa and Geotrichum candidum , possess several lysine residues that have high p K a values (> 12) and are highly exposed to the solvent (surface areas of 210–220 A 2 ). In contrast, the lysine groups of stable lipases like from Rhizomucor miehei, Candida antarctica B and Pseudomonas glumae have moderate p K a values (up to 11.6) and are rather buried (surface areas of 130–150 A 2 ). A close investigation of Candida rugosa lipase revealed that the most exposed lysine residues are located in the lid region (Lys75 and Lys85). The data suggest that Lys75, which is involved in fixing the lid in its open conformation, is presumably the prime target for deactivation by acetaldehyde.


FEBS Journal | 2013

Vancomycin: ligand recognition, dimerization and super-complex formation.

ZhiGuang Jia; Megan L. O'Mara; Johannes Zuegg; Matthew A. Cooper; Alan E. Mark

The antibiotic vancomycin targets lipid II, blocking cell wall synthesis in Gram‐positive bacteria. Despite extensive study, questions remain regarding how it recognizes its primary ligand and what is the most biologically relevant form of vancomycin. In this study, molecular dynamics simulation techniques have been used to examine the process of ligand binding and dimerization of vancomycin. Starting from one or more vancomycin monomers in solution, together with different peptide ligands derived from lipid II, the simulations predict the structures of the ligated monomeric and dimeric complexes to within 0.1 nm rmsd of the structures determined experimentally. The simulations reproduce the conformation transitions observed by NMR and suggest that proposed differences between the crystal structure and the solution structure are an artifact of the way the NMR data has been interpreted in terms of a structural model. The spontaneous formation of both back‐to‐back and face‐to‐face dimers was observed in the simulations. This has allowed a detailed analysis of the origin of the cooperatively between ligand binding and dimerization and suggests that the formation of face‐to‐face dimers could be functionally significant. The work also highlights the possible role of structural water in stabilizing the vancomycin ligand complex and its role in the manifestation of vancomycin resistance.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Variation of the net charge, lipophilicity, and side chain flexibility in Dmt(1)-DALDA: Effect on Opioid Activity and Biodistribution.

Alexandre Novoa; Sylvia Van Dorpe; Evelien Wynendaele; Mariana Spetea; Nathalie Bracke; Sofie Stalmans; Cecilia Betti; Nga N. Chung; Carole Lemieux; Johannes Zuegg; Matthew A. Cooper; Dirk Tourwé; Bart De Spiegeleer; Peter W. Schiller; Steven Ballet

The influence of the side chain charges of the second and fourth amino acid residues in the peptidic μ opioid lead agonist Dmt-d-Arg-Phe-Lys-NH(2) ([Dmt(1)]-DALDA) was examined. Additionally, to increase the overall lipophilicity of [Dmt(1)]-DALDA and to investigate the Phe(3) side chain flexibility, the final amide bond was N-methylated and Phe(3) was replaced by a constrained aminobenzazepine analogue. The in vitro receptor binding and activity of the peptides, as well as their in vivo transport (brain in- and efflux and tissue biodistribution) and antinociceptive properties after peripheral administration (ip and sc) in mice were determined. The structural modifications result in significant shifts of receptor binding, activity, and transport properties. Strikingly, while [Dmt(1)]-DALDA and its N-methyl analogue, Dmt-d-Arg-Phe-NMeLys-NH(2), showed a long-lasting antinociceptive effect (>7 h), the peptides with d-Cit(2) generate potent antinociception more rapidly (maximal effect at 1h postinjection) but also lose their analgesic activity faster when compared to [Dmt(1)]-DALDA and [Dmt(1),NMeLys(4)]-DALDA.


ACS Infectious Diseases | 2016

Contribution of Amphipathicity and Hydrophobicity to the Antimicrobial Activity and Cytotoxicity of β-Hairpin Peptides

Ingrid Alexia Edwards; Alysha G. Elliott; Angela M. Kavanagh; Johannes Zuegg; Mark A. T. Blaskovich; Matthew A. Cooper

Bacteria have acquired extensive resistance mechanisms to protect themselves against antibiotic action. Today the bacterial membrane has become one of the “final frontiers” in the search for new compounds acting on novel targets to address the threat of multi-drug resistant (MDR) and XDR bacterial pathogens. β-Hairpin antimicrobial peptides are amphipathic, membrane-binding antibiotics that exhibit a broad range of activities against Gram-positive, Gram-negative, and fungal pathogens. However, most members of the class also possess adverse cytotoxicity and hemolytic activity that preclude their development as candidate antimicrobials. We examined peptide hydrophobicity, amphipathicity, and structure to better dissect and understand the correlation between antimicrobial activity and toxicity, membrane binding, and membrane permeability. The hydrophobicity, pI, net charge at physiological pH, and amphipathic moment for the β-hairpin antimicrobial peptides tachyplesin-1, polyphemusin-1, protegrin-1, gomesin, arenicin-3, and thanatin were determined and correlated with key antimicrobial activity and toxicity data. These included antimicrobial activity against five key bacterial pathogens and two fungi, cytotoxicity against human cell lines, and hemolytic activity in human erythrocytes. Observed antimicrobial activity trends correlated with compound amphipathicity and, to a lesser extent, with overall hydrophobicity. Antimicrobial activity increased with amphipathicity, but unfortunately so did toxicity. Of note, tachyplesin-1 was found to be 8-fold more amphipathic than gomesin. These analyses identify tachyplesin-1 as a promising scaffold for rational design and synthetic optimization toward an antibiotic candidate.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Structure aided design of chimeric antibiotics

Tomislav Karoli; Sreeman K. Mamidyala; Johannes Zuegg; Scott R. Fry; Ernest H. L. Tee; Tanya A. Bradford; Praveen K. Madala; Johnny X. Huang; Soumya Ramu; Mark S. Butler; Matthew A. Cooper

The rise of antibiotic resistance is of great clinical concern. One approach to reducing the development of resistance is to co-administer two or more antibiotics with different modes of action. However, it can be difficult to control the distribution and pharmacokinetics of two drugs to ensure both concentrations remain within the range of therapeutic efficacy whilst avoiding adverse effects. Hybrid drugs, where two drugs are linked together with a flexible linker, have been explored, but the resultant large, flexible molecules can have poor bioavailability. We have developed a chimeric approach using click chemistry where the pharmacophores of two drugs are overlapped into a single smaller, more drug-like molecule. Design and selection of compounds were assisted by in silico structural docking. We prepared a series of compounds that include candidates showing activity against the targets of both trimethoprim; dihydrofolate reductase, and ciprofloxacin; DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV. The resultant triazole containing molecules show modest, but broad spectrum activities against drug sensitive and resistant Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria, with no observable cytotoxicity.


Biopolymers | 2011

Membrane binding and perturbation studies of the antimicrobial peptides caerin, citropin, and maculatin.

C. S. Brian Chia; Yujing Gong; John H. Bowie; Johannes Zuegg; Matthew A. Cooper

Citropin 1.1, maculatin 1.1, and caerin 1.1 are short antibacterial cationic peptides from the skin glands of the Australian tree frog Litoria species. Several analogues have been synthesized to give a better insight into the relationship between the structure of the peptides and their antibacterial and haemolytic activity. Binding studies using a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensor together with a vesicle‐capture sensor chip have been used to investigate selectivity of the peptides and their analogues for 1,2‐dimyristoyl‐sn‐glycero‐3‐phosphoglycerol (DMPG) and 1,2‐dimyristoyl‐sn‐glycero‐3‐phosphocholine (DMPC) vesicles, as well as for vesicles made from lipid extracts from Escherichia coli and bovine brain. Data obtained for membrane selectivity using natural lipid extracts show better correlation with minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) values against Gram‐positive bacteria and haemolytic activity than that obtained using synthetic DMPG and DMPC. Electron microscopy and membrane leakage studies using Gram‐positive bacteria gave further insight into the membrane disruption properties of the peptides. For maculatin 1.1, it was found that the central proline residue, which is responsible for a bend in the α‐helical structure, is essential not only for the antibacterial activity but also for binding, and perturbation of membranes. The caerin analogues showed only small variations in their MIC values and membrane binding. In contrast, for citropin 1.1, the analogue replacing the aspartate with a lysine showed the lowest MIC against Gram‐positive bacteria and best membrane binding to E. coli lipid extracts, coinciding with an increased hydrophobic moment of the peptide. These data give further insight into these antimicrobial natural products, toward the development and evaluation of these and other analogues as potential antibiotics.

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Wim Meutermans

University of Queensland

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Bernd Becker

University of Queensland

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Craig Muldoon

University of Queensland

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Soumya Ramu

University of Queensland

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