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Dive into the research topics where Peter Dr. Hammann is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Dr. Hammann.


Science | 2015

Targeting DnaN for tuberculosis therapy using novel griselimycins

Angela Kling; Peer Lukat; Deepak Almeida; Armin Bauer; Evelyne Fontaine; Sylvie Sordello; Nestor Zaburannyi; Jennifer Herrmann; Silke C. Wenzel; Claudia König; Nicole C. Ammerman; María Belén Barrio; Kai Borchers; Florence Bordon-Pallier; Mark Brönstrup; Gilles Courtemanche; Martin Gerlitz; Michel Geslin; Peter Dr. Hammann; Dirk W. Heinz; Holger Hoffmann; Sylvie Klieber; Markus Kohlmann; Michael Kurz; Christine Lair; Hans Matter; Eric L. Nuermberger; Sandeep Tyagi; Laurent Fraisse; Jacques Grosset

New for old—TB drug development Tuberculosis (TB) is a global health threat for which there is only lengthy drug treatment. Patients need to consume multiple tablets over several months and frequently fail to complete their treatment. Consequently, drug-resistant strains of the pathogen have emerged, which add to the threat. Kling et al. revisited a natural product called griselimycin, extracted from the same organism that produced the prototype anti-TB drug, streptomycin. Unmodified griselimycin has poor pharmacological properties. However, one synthetic derivative had improved oral uptake and penetrated cells of the immune system that harbor the TB mycobacterium. In combination with other drugs, the griselimycin derivative showed high potency in mice with TB. Science, this issue p. 1106 A griselimycin-derived drug that blocks the DNA polymerase sliding clamp is a potent anti-tuberculosis lead. The discovery of Streptomyces-produced streptomycin founded the age of tuberculosis therapy. Despite the subsequent development of a curative regimen for this disease, tuberculosis remains a worldwide problem, and the emergence of multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis has prioritized the need for new drugs. Here we show that new optimized derivatives from Streptomyces-derived griselimycin are highly active against M. tuberculosis, both in vitro and in vivo, by inhibiting the DNA polymerase sliding clamp DnaN. We discovered that resistance to griselimycins, occurring at very low frequency, is associated with amplification of a chromosomal segment containing dnaN, as well as the ori site. Our results demonstrate that griselimycins have high translational potential for tuberculosis treatment, validate DnaN as an antimicrobial target, and capture the process of antibiotic pressure-induced gene amplification.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Biosynthetic Studies of Telomycin Reveal New Lipopeptides with Enhanced Activity.

Chengzhang Fu; Lena Keller; Armin Bauer; Mark Brönstrup; Alexandre Froidbise; Peter Dr. Hammann; Jennifer Herrmann; Guillaume Mondésert; Michael Kurz; Matthias Schiell; Dietmar Schummer; Luigi Toti; Joachim Wink; Rolf Müller

Telomycin (TEM) is a cyclic depsipeptide antibiotic active against Gram-positive bacteria. In this study, five new natural telomycin analogues produced by Streptomyces canus ATCC 12646 were identified. To understand the biosynthetic machinery of telomycin and to generate more analogues by pathway engineering, the TEM biosynthesis gene cluster has been characterized from S. canus ATCC 12646: it spans approximately 80.5 kb and consists of 34 genes encoding fatty acid ligase, nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs), regulators, transporters, and tailoring enzymes. The gene cluster was heterologously expressed in Streptomyces albus J1074 setting the stage for convenient biosynthetic engineering, mutasynthesis, and production optimization. Moreover, in-frame deletions of one hydroxylase and two P450 monooxygenase genes resulted in the production of novel telomycin derivatives, revealing these genes to be responsible for the specific modification by hydroxylation of three amino acids found in the TEM backbone. Surprisingly, natural lipopeptide telomycin precursors were identified when characterizing an unusual precursor deacylation mechanism during telomycin maturation. By in vivo gene inactivation and in vitro biochemical characterization of the recombinant enzyme Tem25, the maturation process was shown to involve the cleavage of previously unknown telomycin precursor-lipopeptides, to yield 6-methylheptanoic acid and telomycins. These lipopeptides were isolated from an inactivation mutant of tem25 encoding a (de)acylase, structurally elucidated, and then shown to be deacylated by recombinant Tem25. The TEM precursor and several semisynthetic lipopeptide TEM derivatives showed rapid bactericidal killing and were active against several multidrug-resistant (MDR) Gram-positive pathogens, opening the path to future chemical optimization of telomycin for pharmaceutical application.


Tetrahedron | 1990

Secondary metabolites by chemical screening-5. cycloaddition reactions of elaiophylin☆

Peter Dr. Hammann; Gerhard Kretzschmar

Abstract The title compound 1 reacts by cycloaddition with diazoalkanes 2a and 2b to pyrazolines 3a and 3b and with nitrones 5a and 5b to isoxazolidines 6a and 6b . Reaction of 1 with diazofluorene yields the cyclopropane adduct 4 . The reaction proceeds regio- and stereoselectively in high yields preserving the symmetry of the macrodiolide system.


The Journal of Antibiotics | 1991

Secondary metabolites by chemical screening 4. Detection, isolation and biological activities of chiral synthons from Streptomyces

Susanne Grabley; Peter Dr. Hammann; Heinz Kluge; Joachim Wink; Petra Kricke; Axel Zeeck


The Journal of Antibiotics | 1990

Secondary metabolites by chemical screening: II. Amycins A and B two novel niphimycin analogs isolated from a high producer strain of elaiophylin and nigericin.

Susanne Grabley; Peter Dr. Hammann; Wolfgang Raether; Joachim Wink; Axel Zeeck


The Journal of Antibiotics | 1991

Secondary metabolites by chemical screening. Part 19. SM 196 A and B, novel biologically active angucyclinones from Streptomyces sp.

Susanne Grabley; Peter Dr. Hammann; Klaus Hütter; Heinz Kluge; Ralf Thiericke; Joachim Wink; Axel Zeeck


The Journal of Antibiotics | 1990

Secondary metabolites by chemical screening. 7. I. Elaiophylin derivatives and their biological activities.

Peter Dr. Hammann; Gerhard Kretzschmar; Gerhard Seibert


The Journal of Antibiotics | 2001

The Chemical Structure of Mumbaistatin, a Novel Glucose-6-phosphate Translocase Inhibitor Produced by Streptomyces sp. DSM 11641

Laszlo Vertesy; Michael Kurz; Erich Paulus; Dietmar Schummer; Peter Dr. Hammann


Archive | 1994

Lipopeptides from actinoplanes sp. endowed with pharmacological activity, process for their preparation and their use

Peter Dr. Hammann; Johannes Dr Meiwes; Gerhard Seibert; Laszlo Vertesy; Joachim Wink; Astrid Markus


Archive | 1991

Use of 10-membered ring lactones as lipid regulators

Ernold Granzer; Peter Dr. Hammann; Joachim Dr Wink; Susanne Grabley

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Axel Zeeck

University of Göttingen

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