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Dive into the research topics where Maria Leidenberger is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Leidenberger.


Journal of Cell Science | 2015

Vinculin phosphorylation at residues Y100 and Y1065 is required for cellular force transmission

Vera Auernheimer; Lena Lautscham; Maria Leidenberger; Oliver Friedrich; Barbara Kappes; Ben Fabry; Wolfgang H. Goldmann

ABSTRACT The focal adhesion protein vinculin connects the actin cytoskeleton, through talin and integrins, with the extracellular matrix. Vinculin consists of a globular head and tail domain, which undergo conformational changes from a closed auto-inhibited conformation in the cytoplasm to an open conformation in focal adhesions. Src-mediated phosphorylation has been suggested to regulate this conformational switch. To explore the role of phosphorylation in vinculin activation, we used knock-out mouse embryonic fibroblasts re-expressing different vinculin mutants in traction microscopy, magnetic tweezer microrheology, FRAP and actin-binding assays. Compared to cells expressing wild-type or constitutively active vinculin, we found reduced tractions, cytoskeletal stiffness, adhesion strength, and increased vinculin dynamics in cells expressing constitutively inactive vinculin or vinculin where Src-mediated phosphorylation was blocked by replacing tyrosine at position 100 and/or 1065 with a non-phosphorylatable phenylalanine residue. Replacing tyrosine residues with phospho-mimicking glutamic acid residues restored cellular tractions, stiffness and adhesion strength, as well as vinculin dynamics, and facilitated vinculin–actin binding. These data demonstrate that Src-mediated phosphorylation is necessary for vinculin activation, and that phosphorylation controls cytoskeletal mechanics by regulating force transmission between the actin cytoskeleton and focal adhesion proteins. Summary: Src-mediated phosphorylation on Y100 and Y1065 is a prerequisite for vinculin activation, and controls cytoskeletal mechanics by regulating force transmission between the actin cytoskeleton and focal adhesion proteins.


ACS Omega | 2017

Synthesis of Novel Hybrids of Quinazoline and Artemisinin with High Activities against Plasmodium falciparum, Human Cytomegalovirus, and Leukemia Cells

Tony Fröhlich; Christoph Reiter; Mohammad M. Ibrahim; Jannis Beutel; Corina Hutterer; Isabel Zeitträger; Hanife Bahsi; Maria Leidenberger; Oliver Friedrich; Barbara Kappes; Thomas Efferth; Manfred Marschall; Svetlana B. Tsogoeva

Many quinazoline derivatives have been synthesized over the last few decades with great pharmacological potential, such as antimalarial, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, anticancer, and antiviral. But so far, no quinazoline–artemisinin hybrids have been reported in the literature. In the present study, five novel quinazoline–artemisinin hybrids were synthesized and evaluated for their in vitro biological activity against malarial parasites (Plasmodium falciparum 3D7), leukemia cells (CCRF-CEM and CEM/ADR5000), and human cytomegalovirus. Remarkably, hybrid 9 (EC50 = 1.4 nM), the most active antimalarial compound of this study, was not only more potent than artesunic acid (EC50 = 9.7 nM) but at the same time more active than the clinically used drugs dihydroartemisinin (EC50 = 2.4 nM) and chloroquine (EC50 = 9.8 nM). Furthermore, hybrids 9 and 10 were the most potent compounds with regard to anticytomegaloviral activity (EC50 = 0.15–0.21 μM). They were able to outperform ganciclovir (EC50 = 2.6 μM), which is the relevant standard drug of antiviral therapy, by a factor of 12–17. Moreover, we identified a new highly active quinazoline derivative, compound 14, that is most effective in suppressing cytomegalovirus replication with an EC50 value in the nanomolar range (EC50 = 50 nM). In addition, hybrid 9 exhibited an antileukemia effect similar to that of artesunic acid, with EC50 values in the low micromolar range, and was 45 times more active toward the multidrug-resistant CEM/ADR5000 cells (EC50 = 0.5 μM) than the standard drug doxorubicin.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018

Synthesis of Thymoquinone–Artemisinin Hybrids: New Potent Antileukemia, Antiviral, and Antimalarial Agents

Tony Fröhlich; Christoph Reiter; Mohamed E.M. Saeed; Corina Hutterer; Friedrich Hahn; Maria Leidenberger; Oliver Friedrich; Barbara Kappes; Manfred Marschall; Thomas Efferth; Svetlana B. Tsogoeva

A series of hybrid compounds based on the natural products artemisinin and thymoquinone was synthesized and investigated for their biological activity against the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum 3D7 strain, human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), and two leukemia cell lines (drug-sensitive CCRF-CEM and multidrug-resistant subline CEM/ADR5000). An unprecedented one-pot method of selective formation of C-10α-acetate 14 starting from a 1:1 mixture of C-10α- to C-10β-dihydroartemisinin was developed. The key step of this facile method is a mild decarboxylative activation of malonic acid mediated by DCC/DMAP. Ether-linked thymoquinone-artemisinin hybrids 6a/b stood out as the most active compounds in all categories, while showing no toxic side effects toward healthy human foreskin fibroblasts and thus being selective. They exhibited EC50 values of 0.2 μM against the doxorubicin-sensitive as well as the multidrug-resistant leukemia cells and therefore can be regarded as superior to doxorubicin. Moreover, they showed to be five times more active than the standard drug ganciclovir and nearly eight times more active than artesunic acid against HCMV. In addition, hybrids 6a/b possessed excellent antimalarial activity (EC50 = 5.9/3.7 nM), which was better than that of artesunic acid (EC50 = 8.2 nM) and chloroquine (EC50 = 9.8 nM). Overall, most of the presented thymoquinone-artemisinin-based hybrids exhibit an excellent and broad variety of biological activities (anticancer, antimalarial, and antiviral) combined with a low toxicity/high selectivity profile.


ChemistryOpen | 2017

Deeper Insight into the Six‐Step Domino Reaction of Aldehydes with Malononitrile and Evaluation of Antiviral and Antimalarial Activities of the Obtained Bicyclic Products

Christina M. Bock; Gangajji Parameshwarappa; Simon Bönisch; Walter Bauer; Corina Hutterer; Maria Leidenberger; Oliver Friedrich; Manfred Marschall; Barbara Kappes; Andreas Görling; Svetlana B. Tsogoeva

Abstract The straightforward and efficient synthesis of complex aza‐ and carbobicyclic compounds, which are of importance for medicinal chemistry, is a challenge for modern chemical methodology. An unprecedented metal‐free six‐step domino reaction of aldehydes with malononitrile was presented in our previous study to provide, in a single operation, these bicyclic nitrogen‐containing molecules. Presented here is a deeper investigation of this atom‐economical domino process by extending the scope of aldehydes, performing post‐modifications of domino products, applying bifunctional organocatalysts and comprehensive NMR studies of selected domino products. The thermodynamic aspects of the overall reaction are also demonstrated using DFT methods in conjunction with a semi‐empirical treatment of van der Waals interactions. Furthermore, biological studies of seven highly functionalized and artemisinin‐containing domino products against human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) and Plasmodium falciparum 3D7 are presented. Remarkably, in vitro tests against HCMV revealed five domino products to be highly active compounds (EC50 0.071–1.8 μm), outperforming the clinical reference drug ganciclovir (EC50 2.6 μm). Against P. falciparum 3D7, three of the investigated artemisinin‐derived domino products (EC50 0.72–1.8 nm) were more potent than the clinical drug chloroquine (EC50 9.1 nm).


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2018

Frontispiece: Synthesis of Artemisinin-Derived Dimers, Trimers and Dendrimers: Investigation of Their Antimalarial and Antiviral Activities Including Putative Mechanisms of Action

Tony Fröhlich; Friedrich Hahn; Lucid Belmudes; Maria Leidenberger; Oliver Friedrich; Barbara Kappes; Yohann Couté; Manfred Marschall; Svetlana B. Tsogoeva

Generation of dimers, trimers and dendrimers of bioactive compounds is an approach that has recently been developed for the discovery of new potent drug candidates. Herein, we present the synthesis of new artemisinin-derived dimers and dendrimers and investigate their action against malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum 3D7 strain and human cytomegalovirus (HCMV). Dimer 7 was the most active compound (EC50 1.4 nm) in terms of antimalarial efficacy and was even more effective than the standard drugs dihydroartemisinin (EC50 2.4 nm), artesunic acid (EC50 8.9 nm) and chloroquine (EC50 9.8 nm). Trimer 4 stood out as the most active agent against HCMV in vitro replication and exerted an EC50 value of 0.026 μm, representing an even higher activity than the two reference drugs ganciclovir (EC50 2.60 μm) and artesunic acid (EC50 5.41 μm). In addition, artemisinin-derived dimer 13 and trimer 15 were for the first time both immobilized on TOYOPEARL AF-Amino-650M beads and used for mass spectrometry-based target identification experiments using total lysates of HCMV-infected primary human fibroblasts. Two major groups of novel target candidates, namely cytoskeletal and mitochondrial proteins were obtained. Two putatively compound-binding viral proteins, namely major capsid protein (MCP) and envelope glycoprotein pUL132, which are both essential for HCMV replication, were identified.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2018

Access to new highly potent antileukemia, antiviral and antimalarial agents via hybridization of natural products (homo)egonol, thymoquinone and artemisinin

Aysun Çapcı Karagöz; Christoph Reiter; Ean-Jeong Seo; Lisa Gruber; Friedrich Hahn; Maria Leidenberger; Volker Klein; Frank Hampel; Oliver Friedrich; Manfred Marschall; Barbara Kappes; Thomas Efferth; Svetlana B. Tsogoeva

Hybridization of natural products has high potential to further improve their activities and may produce synergistic effects between linked pharmacophores. Here we report synthesis of nine new hybrids of natural products egonol, homoegonol, thymoquinone and artemisinin and evaluation of their activities against P. falciparum 3D7 parasites, human cytomegalovirus, sensitive and multidrug-resistant human leukemia cells. Most of the new hybrids exceed their parent compounds in antimalarial, antiviral and antileukemia activities and in some cases show higher in vitro efficacy than clinically used reference drugs chloroquine, ganciclovir and doxorubicin. Combined, our findings stress the high potency of these hybrids and encourages further use of the hybridization concept in applied pharmacological research.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018

Synthesis of artemisinin-estrogen hybrids highly active against HCMV, P. falciparum, cervical and breast cancer

Tony Fröhlich; Anita Kiss; János Wölfling; Erzsébet Mernyák; Ágnes Kulmány; Renáta Minorics; István Zupkó; Maria Leidenberger; Oliver Friedrich; Barbara Kappes; Friedrich Hahn; Manfred Marschall; Gyula Schneider; Svetlana B. Tsogoeva

Artemisinin-estrogen hybrids were for the first time both synthesized and investigated for their in vitro biological activity against malaria parasites (Plasmodium falciparum 3D7), human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), and a panel of human malignant cells of gynecological origin containing breast (MCF7, MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-361, T47D) and cervical tumor cell lines (HeLa, SiHa, C33A). In terms of antimalarial efficacy, hybrid 8 (EC50 = 3.8 nM) was about two times more active than its parent compound artesunic acid (7) (EC50 = 8.9 nM) as well as the standard drug chloroquine (EC50 = 9.8 nM) and was, therefore, comparable to the clinically used dihydroartemisinin (6) (EC50 = 2.4 nM). Furthermore, hybrids 9-12 showed a strong antiviral effect with EC50 values in the submicromolar range (0.22-0.38 μM) and thus possess profoundly stronger anti-HCMV activity (approximately factor 25) than the parent compound artesunic acid (7) (EC50 = 5.41 μM). These compounds also exerted a higher in vitro anti-HCMV efficacy than ganciclovir used as the standard of current antiviral treatment. In addition, hybrids 8-12 elicited substantially more pronounced growth inhibiting action on all cancer cell lines than their parent compounds and the reference drug cisplatin. The most potent agent, hybrid 12, exhibited submicromolar EC50 values (0.15-0.93 μM) against breast cancer and C33A cell lines.


Archive | 2017

SYBR ® Green I-Based Fluorescence Assay to Assess Cell Viability of Malaria Parasites for Routine Use in Compound Screening

Maria Leidenberger; Cornelia Voigtländer; Nina Simon; Barbara Kappes

Owing to its fast and reliable assessment of parasite growth, the SYBR® Green I-based fluorescence assay is widely used to monitor drug susceptibility of malaria parasites. Its particular advantages are that it is a simple, one-step procedure and very cost-effective making it especially suited for high through put screening of newly developed drugs and drug combinations. Here we describe a SYBR® Green I-based fluorescence assay protocol to be used for routine screening of compounds and extracts in a research laboratory environment. A variation of the standard protocol is also provided allowing to address stage-specific effects of fast-acting drugs.


ChemistryOpen | 2017

Back Cover: Deeper Insight into the Six-Step Domino Reaction of Aldehydes with Malononitrile and Evaluation of Antiviral and Antimalarial Activities of the Obtained Bicyclic Products (ChemistryOpen 3/2017)

Christina M. Bock; Gangajji Parameshwarappa; Simon Bönisch; Walter Bauer; Corina Hutterer; Maria Leidenberger; Oliver Friedrich; Manfred Marschall; Barbara Kappes; Andreas Görling; Svetlana B. Tsogoeva

The Back Cover picture highlights the easy generation of complex azabicyclic and carbobicyclic molecules from two simple compounds in a single operation through a highly efficient six‐step domino reaction. Within a multi‐step domino reaction, one transformation triggers the next, similar to a row of dominoes where one tile hits the next. The in vitro studies against the herpes virus and malaria reveal domino products as highly active compounds, outperforming the clinical reference drugs ganciclovir and chloroquine. More information can be found in the Full Paper by S. B. Tsogoeva and co‐workers on page 364 in Issue 3, 2017 (10.1002/open.201700005).


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

New efficient artemisinin derived agents against human leukemia cells, human cytomegalovirus and Plasmodium falciparum: 2nd generation 1,2,4-trioxane-ferrocene hybrids

Christoph Reiter; Tony Fröhlich; Maen Zeino; Manfred Marschall; Hanife Bahsi; Maria Leidenberger; Oliver Friedrich; Barbara Kappes; Frank Hampel; Thomas Efferth; Svetlana B. Tsogoeva

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Barbara Kappes

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Manfred Marschall

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Svetlana B. Tsogoeva

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Tony Fröhlich

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Christoph Reiter

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Corina Hutterer

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Friedrich Hahn

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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