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Dive into the research topics where Olga B. Bekker is active.

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Featured researches published by Olga B. Bekker.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Search for inhibitors of bacterial and human protein kinases among derivatives of diazepines[1,4] annelated with maleimide and indole cycles.

V. N. Danilenko; Alexander Y. Simonov; Sergey A. Lakatosh; Michael H.G. Kubbutat; Frank Totzke; Christoph Schächtele; S. M. Elizarov; Olga B. Bekker; Svetlana S. Printsevskaya; Yuryi N. Luzikov; Marina I. Reznikova; Alexander A. Shtil; M. N. Preobrazhenskaya

Aminomethylation of 9b,10-dihydro-1H-indolo[1,7:4,5,6]pyrrolo[3,4:2,3][1,4]diazepino-[1,7-a]indole-1,3(2H)-diones or 1H-indolo[1,7:4,5,6]pyrrolo[3,4:2,3][1,4]diazepino[1,7-a]indole-1,3(2H)-diones resulted in dialkylaminomethyl derivatives. Alkylation of the nitrogen atom of maleimide moiety of polyannelated diazepines with 1,3-dibromopropane and subsequent reaction with thiourea or its N-alkyl derivatives gave isothiourea-carrying compounds. The compounds containing isothiourea moiety were active against individual human serine/threonine and tyrosine kinases at low micromolar concentrations. Dialkylaminomethyl derivatives of diazepines sensitized Streptomyces lividans with overexpressed aminoglycoside phosphotransferase type VIII (aphVIII) to kanamycin by inhibiting serine/threonine kinase(s) mediated aphVIII phosphorylation.


Medicinal Chemistry Research | 2015

Synthesis and activity of (+)-usnic acid and (−)-usnic acid derivatives containing 1,3-thiazole cycle against Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Olga B. Bekker; D. N. Sokolov; O. A. Luzina; N. I. Komarova; Yuriy V. Gatilov; Sofia N. Andreevskaya; Tatiana G. Smirnova; Dmitry A. Maslov; Larisa N. Chernousova; N. F. Salakhutdinov; V. N. Danilenko

Abstract New usnic acid (UA) derivatives were investigated in vitro to elucidate their potential inhibitory activities on the growth of Mycobacterium smegmatis and Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Seven pairs of enantiomers of thiazole UA derivatives were tested using the M. smegmatis strain mc2 155 test system, and the “structure–activity” relationship was established. The most active compounds were (+)-3 and (−)-3, and their kinase inhibitory activities were investigated. The results obtained using the Streptomyces lividans APHVIII+ and M. smegmatis APHVIII+ test systems indicated the significant protein kinase activity of these compounds and revealed the species specificity of the actions of the dextro- and levorotatory isomers. Both isomers, (+)-3 and (−)-3, possess similar inhibitory activity against M. tuberculosis H37Rv. The action of the isomers on eukaryotic cells was also investigated, and the results demonstrate that the dextrorotatory isomer (+)-3 leads to the lysis of intact macrophages to a degree higher than that obtained spontaneously and significantly higher than that obtained with the levorotatory isomer.


Microbiology | 2008

Ca2+-dependent modulation of antibiotic resistance in Streptomyces lividans 66 and Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2)

Olga B. Bekker; S. M. Elizarov; M. T. Alekseeva; I. K. Lyubimova; V. N. Danilenko

The level of resistance to antibiotics of various chemical structure in actinobacteria of the genus Streptomyces is shown to be regulated by Ca2+ ions. The inhibitors of Ca2+/calmodulin and Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent serine/threonine protein kinases (STPK) are found to reduce antibiotic resistance of actinobacteria. The effect of Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation on the activity of the enzymatic aminoglycoside phosphotransferase system protecting actinobacteria from aminoglycoside antibiotics was studied. It is shown that inhibitors of Ca2+/calmodulin and Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent STPK reduced the Ca2+-induced kanamycin resistance in Streptomyces lividans cells transformed by a hybrid plasmid which contained the aminoglycoside phosphotransferase VIII (APHVIII) gene. In S. coelicolor A3(2) cells, the protein kinase PK25 responsible for APHVIII phosphorylation in vitro was identified. It is suggested that STPK play a major role in the regulation of antibiotic resistance in actinobacteria.


Tuberculosis | 2015

Resistance to pyrazinamide in Russian Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates: pncA sequencing versus Bactec MGIT 960.

Dmitry A. Maslov; Marina V. Zaĭchikova; Larisa N. Chernousova; Kirill V. Shur; Olga B. Bekker; Tatiana G. Smirnova; Elena E. Larionova; Sofya N. Andreevskaya; Ying Zhang; V. N. Danilenko

Resistance to pyrazinamide (PZA) may impact clinical outcome of anti-tuberculosis chemotherapy. PZA susceptibility testing using MGIT 960 is not reliable and little information is available on the prevalence of PZA resistance in Russia. A collection of 64 clinical isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, including 35 multidrug resistant and extensively drug-resistant (MDR/XDR), was analyzed for PZA resistance using MGIT 960, Wayne test, and sequencing of PZA resistance genes pncA, rpsA and panD. In addition, we analyzed 519 MDR-TB strains for susceptibility to PZA by MGIT 960. Sequencing of pncA revealed 17 of 25 (68%) MDR strains and all 10 XDR strains harboring pncA mutations. A correlation of φ = 0.81 between MGIT 960 and pncA sequencing was observed. Mutations in rpsA and panD not associated with PZA resistance as defined by MGIT 960 were identified. We found 1 PZA-resistant strain without mutations in known PZA resistance genes. Almost 73% of MDR-TB strains isolated in Moscow, Russia, were PZA-resistant by MGIT 960 testing of 519 MDR-TB clinical isolates. Further studies are needed to determine the role of rpsA and panD mutations in possible low-level PZA resistance and to identify the molecular basis of new PZA resistance in the isolate without known PZA resistance mutations.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Synthesis and cytotoxicity of oligomycin A derivatives modified in the side chain.

Lyudmila N. Lysenkova; Konstantin F Turchin; Alexander M. Korolev; Lyubov G. Dezhenkova; Olga B. Bekker; Alexander A. Shtil; V. N. Danilenko; M. N. Preobrazhenskaya

A novel way of chemical modification of the macrolide antibiotic oligomycin A (1) at the side chain was developed. Mesylation of 1 with methane sulfonyl chloride in the presence of 4-dimethylaminopyridine produced 33-O-mesyl oligomycin in 56% yield. Reactions of this intermediate with sodium azide produced the key derivative 33-azido-33-deoxy-oligomycin A in 60% yield. 1,3-Dipolar cycloaddition reaction with propiolic acid, methyl ester of propiolic acid, and phenyl acetylene resulted in 33-deoxy-33-(1,2,3-triazol-1-yl)oligomycin A derivatives substituted at N4 of the triazole cycle. The mesylated oligomycin A and 33-deoxy-33-azidooligomycin A did not inhibit F0F1 ATFase ATPase; however, 33-azido-33-deoxy-oligomycin A and the derivatives containing 4-phenyltriazole, 4-methoxycarbonyl-triazole and 3-dimethylaminoethyl amide of carboxyltriazole substituents demonstrated a high cytotoxicity against K562 leukemia and HCT116 human colon carcinoma cell lines whereas non-malignant skin fibroblasts were less sensitive to these compounds. Novel series of oligomycin A derivatives allow for the search of intracellular molecules beyond F0F1 ATP synthase relevant to the cytotoxic properties of this perspective chemical class.


Biochemistry (moscow) Supplement Series A: Membrane and Cell Biology | 2009

F0F1 ATP synthase of Streptomycetes: Modulation of activity and oligomycin resistance by protein Ser/Thr kinases

M. G. Alekseeva; S. M. Elizarov; Olga B. Bekker; I. K. Lubimova; V. N. Danilenko

Inverted membrane vesicles of Gram-positive actinobacteria Streptomyces fradiae, S. lividans, and S. avermitilis have been prepared and membrane-bound F0F1 ATP synthase has been biochemically characterized. It has been shown that the ATPase activity of membrane-bound F0F1 complex is Mg2+-dependent and moderately stimulated by high concentrations of Ca2+ ions (10–20 mM). The ATPase activity is inhibited by N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and oligomycin A, typical F0F1 ATPase inhibitors that react with the membrane-bound F0 complex. The assay of biochemical properties of the F0F1 ATPases of Streptomycetes in all cases showed the presence of ATPase populations highly susceptible and insensitive to oligomycin A. The in vitro labeling and inhibitory assay showed that the inverted phospholipid vesicles of S. fradiae contained active membrane-bound Ser/Thr protein kinase(s) phosphorylating the proteins of the F0F1 complex. Inhibition of phosphorylation leads to decrease of the ATPase activity and increase of its susceptibility to oligomycin. The in vivo assay confirmed the enhancement of actinobacteria cell sensitivity to oligomycin after inhibition of endogenous phosphorylation. The sequencing of the S. fradiae genes encoding oligomycin-binding A and C subunits of F0F1 ATP synthase revealed their close phylogenetic relation to the genes of S. lividans and S. avermitilis.


The Journal of Antibiotics | 2014

Study on retroaldol degradation products of antibiotic oligomycin A

Lyudmila N. Lysenkova; Konstantin F Turchin; Alexander M. Korolev; V. N. Danilenko; Olga B. Bekker; Lyubov G. Dezhenkova; Alexander A. Shtil; M. N. Preobrazhenskaya

Studies of reactivity of antibiotic oligomycin A in various alkaline conditions showed that the compound easily undergoes retroaldol degradation in β-hydroxy ketone fragments positioned in the C7–C13 moiety of the antibiotic molecule. Depending on reaction conditions, the retroaldol fragmentation of the 8,9 or 12,13 bonds or formation of a product through double retroaldol degradation, when the fragment C9–C12 was detached, took place followed by further transformations of the intermediate aldehydes formed. The structures of the obtained non-cyclic derivatives of oligomycin A were supported by NMR and MS methods. NMR parameters demonstrate the striking similarity of the geometry (conformation) of the fragment C20–C34 in the non-cyclic products of retroaldol degradation and the starting antibiotic 1. The compounds obtained had lower cytototoxic properties than oligomycin A for human leukemia cells K-562 and colon cancer cells HCT-116 and lower activity against growth inhibition of model object Streptomyces fradiae. It cannot be excluded that the products of retroaldol degradation participate in the biological effects of antibiotic oligomycin A.


Genome Announcements | 2014

Draft Genome Sequence of Streptomyces fradiae ATCC 19609, a Strain Highly Sensitive to Antibiotics

Olga B. Bekker; Ksenia M. Klimina; Aleksey A. Vatlin; Natalia V. Zakharevich; Artem S. Kasianov; V. N. Danilenko

ABSTRACT We report here a sequence of the genome of the Streptomyces fradiae ATCC 19609 strain, initially isolated from the soil, which produces tylosin. S. fradiae is highly sensitive to different classes of antibiotics, compared to the sensitivities of other bacteria. We have identified 9 groups of genes directly or indirectly involved in the resistome formation.


The Journal of Antibiotics | 2012

A novel acyclic oligomycin A derivative formed via retro-aldol rearrangement of oligomycin A

Lyudmila N. Lysenkova; Konstantin F Turchin; Alexander M. Korolev; Evgenyi E Bykov; V. N. Danilenko; Olga B. Bekker; Alexey S Trenin; Sergei M Elizarov; Lyubov G. Dezhenkova; Alexander A. Shtil; M. N. Preobrazhenskaya

The antibiotic oligomycin A in the presence of K2CO3 and n-Bu4NHSO4 in chloroform in phase-transfer conditions afforded a novel derivative through the initial retro-aldol fragmentation of the 8,9 bond, followed by further transformation of the intermediate aldehyde. NMR, MS and quantum chemical calculations showed that the novel compound is the acyclic oligomycin A derivative, in which the 8,9 carbon bond is disrupted and two polyfunctional branches are connected with spiroketal moiety in positions C-23 and C-25. The tri-O-acetyl derivative of the novel derivative was prepared. The acyclic oligomycin A derivative retained the ability to induce apoptosis in tumor cells at low micromolar concentrations, whereas its antimicrobial potencies decreased substantially. The derivative virtually lost the inhibitory activity against F0F1 ATP synthase-containing proteoliposomes, strongly suggesting the existence of the target(s) beyond F0F1 ATP synthase that is important for the antitumor potency of oligomycin A.


Genome Announcements | 2015

Draft Genome Sequences of Two Pyrazinamide-Resistant Clinical Isolates, Mycobacterium tuberculosis 13-4152 and 13-2459

D. A. Maslov; K. V. Shur; Olga B. Bekker; Natalia V. Zakharevich; M. V. Zaichikova; K. M. Klimina; T. G. Smirnova; Ying Zhang; L. N. Chernousova; V. N. Danilenko

ABSTRACT We report draft genome sequences of two pyrazinamide (PZA)-resistant isolates, Mycobacterium tuberculosis 13-4152 and 13-2459. Isolate 13-4152 is PZA resistant, though it lacks mutations in known genes of PZA resistance. The comparative analysis of these genomes with those stored in GenBank revealed unique mutations, which may elucidate new mechanisms of PZA resistance.

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V. N. Danilenko

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Aleksey A. Vatlin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Dmitry A. Maslov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Kirill V. Shur

Russian Academy of Sciences

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S. M. Elizarov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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V. B. Tsvetkov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Ying Zhang

Johns Hopkins University

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Dmitry A. Gruzdev

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Galina L. Levit

Russian Academy of Sciences

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