Torsten Schwecke
Technical University of Berlin
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Featured researches published by Torsten Schwecke.
ChemBioChem | 2006
Torsten Schwecke; Kirsten Göttling; Pawel Durek; Ines Dueñas; Norbert F. Käufer; Susanne Zock-Emmenthal; Eike Staub; Torsten Neuhof; Ralf Dieckmann; Hans von Döhren
A nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) in Schizosaccharomyces pombe, which possesses an unusual structure incorporating three adenylation domains, six thiolation domains and six condensation domains, has been shown to produce the cyclohexapeptide siderophore ferrichrome. One of the adenylation domains is truncated and contains a distorted key motif. Substrate‐binding specificities of the remaining two domains were assigned by molecular modelling to glycine and to N‐acetyl‐N‐hydroxy‐L‐ornithine. Hexapeptide siderophore synthetase genes of Magnaporthe grisea and Fusarium graminearum were both identified and analyzed with respect to substrate‐binding sites, and the predicted product ferricrocin was identified in each. A comparative analysis of these synthetase systems, including those of the basidiomycete Ustilago maydis, the homobasidiomycete Omphalotus olearius and the ascomycetes Aspergillus nidulans, Aspergillus fumigatus, Fusarium graminearum, Cochliobolus heterostrophus, Neurospora crassa and Aureobasidium pullulans, revealed divergent domain compositions with respect to their number and positioning, although all produce similar products by iterative processes. A phylogenetic analysis of both NRPSs and associated L‐N5‐ornithine monooxygenases revealed that ferrichrome‐type siderophore biosynthesis has coevolved in fungi with varying in trans interactions of NRPS domains.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2014
Romy Scholz; Joachim Vater; Anto Budiharjo; Zhiyuan Wang; Yueqiu He; Kristin Dietel; Torsten Schwecke; Stefanie Herfort; Peter Lasch; Rainer Borriss
Bacillus amyloliquefaciens FZB42 is a Gram-positive plant growth-promoting bacterium with an impressive capacity to synthesize nonribosomal secondary metabolites with antimicrobial activity. Here we report on a novel circular bacteriocin which is ribosomally synthesized by FZB42. The compound displayed high antibacterial activity against closely related Gram-positive bacteria. Transposon mutagenesis and subsequent site-specific mutagenesis combined with matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectroscopy revealed that a cluster of six genes covering 4,490 bp was responsible for the production, modification, and export of and immunity to an antibacterial compound, here designated amylocyclicin, with a molecular mass of 6,381 Da. Peptide sequencing of the fragments obtained after tryptic digestion of the purified peptide revealed posttranslational cleavage of an N-terminal extension and head-to-tail circularization of the novel bacteriocin. Homology to other putative circular bacteriocins in related bacteria let us assume that this type of peptide is widespread among the Bacillus/Paenibacillus taxon.
Analytical Chemistry | 2010
Peter Lasch; Michal Drevinek; Herbert Nattermann; Roland Grunow; Maren Stämmler; Ralf Dieckmann; Torsten Schwecke; Dieter Naumann
Yersinia are Gram-negative, rod-shaped facultative anaerobes, and some of them, Yersinia enterocolitica, Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, and Yersinia pestis, are pathogenic in humans. Rapid and accurate identification of Yersinia strains is essential for appropriate therapeutic management and timely intervention for infection control. In the past decade matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry (MS) in combination with computer-aided pattern recognition has evolved as a rapid, objective, and reliable technique for microbial identification. In this comprehensive study a total of 146 strains of all currently known Yersinia species complemented by 35 strains of other relevant genera of the Enterobacteriaceae family were investigated by MALDI-TOF MS and chemometrics. Bacterial sample preparation included microbial inactivation according to a recently developed mass spectrometry compatible inactivation protocol. The mass spectral profiles were evaluated by supervised feature selection methods to identify family-, genus-, and species-specific biomarker proteins and--for classification purposes--by pattern recognition techniques. Unsupervised hierarchical cluster analysis revealed a high degree of correlation between bacterial taxonomy and subproteome-based MALDI-TOF MS classification. Furthermore, classification analysis by supervised artificial neural networks allowed identification of strains of Y. pestis with an accuracy of 100%. In-depth analysis of proteomic data demonstrated the existence of Yersinia-specific biomarkers at m/z 4350 and 6046. In addition, we could also identify species-specific biomarkers of Y. enterocolitica at m/z 7262, 9238, and 9608. For Y. pseudotuberculosis a combination of biomarkers at m/z 6474, 7274, and 9268 turned out to be specific, while a peak combination at m/z 3065, 6637, and 9659 was characteristic for strains of Y. pestis. Bioinformatic approaches and tandem mass spectrometry were employed to reveal the molecular identity of biomarker ions. In this way, the Y. pestis-specific biomarker at m/z 3065 could be identified as a fragment of the plasmid-encoded plasminogen activator, one of the major virulence factors in plague infections.
Journal of Molecular Evolution | 2011
Sabine Gruber; Ugur Sezerman; Torsten Schwecke; Aydin Albayrak; Torsten Neuhof; Hans von Döhren; Scott E. Baker; Christian P. Kubicek
Hydrophobins are small proteins, characterised by the presence of eight positionally conserved cysteine residues, and are present in all filamentous asco- and basidiomycetes. They are found on the outer surfaces of cell walls of hyphae and conidia, where they mediate interactions between the fungus and the environment. Hydrophobins are conventionally grouped into two classes (class I and II) according to their solubility in solvents, hydropathy profiles and spacing between the conserved cysteines. Here we describe a novel set of hydrophobins from Trichoderma spp. that deviate from this classification in their hydropathy, cysteine spacing and protein surface pattern. Phylogenetic analysis shows that they form separate clades within ascomycete class I hydrophobins. Using T. atroviride as a model, the novel hydrophobins were found to be expressed under conditions of glucose limitation and to be regulated by differential splicing.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009
Marianna Mikus; Lóránt Hatvani; Torsten Neuhof; Ralf Dieckmann; Torsten Schwecke; Irina S. Druzhinina; Hans von Döhren; Christian P. Kubicek
ABSTRACT Hydrophobins are small extracellular proteins, unique to and ubiquitous in filamentous fungi, which mediate interactions between the fungus and environment. The mycoparasitic fungus Hypocrea atroviridis has recently been shown to possess 10 different class II hydrophobin genes, which is a much higher number than that of any other ascomycete investigated so far. In order to learn the potential advantage of this hydrophobin multiplicity for the fungus, we have investigated their expression patterns under different physiological conditions (e.g., vegetative growth), various conditions inducing sporulation (light, carbon starvation, and mechanical injury-induced stress), and confrontation with potential hosts for mycoparasitism. The results show that the 10 hydrophobins display different patterns of response to these conditions: one hydrophobin (encoded by hfb-2b) is constitutively induced under all conditions, whereas other hydrophobins were formed only under conditions of carbon starvation (encoded by hfb-1c and hfb-6c) or light plus carbon starvation (encoded by hfb-2c, hfb-6a, and hfb-6b). The hydrophobins encoded by hfb-1b and hfb-5a were primarily formed during vegetative growth and under mechanical injury-provoked stress. hfb-22a was not expressed under any conditions and is likely a pseudogene. None of the 10 genes showed a specific expression pattern during mycoparasitic interaction. Most, but not all, of the expression patterns under the three different conditions of sporulation were dependent on one or both of the two blue-light regulator proteins BLR1 and BLR2, as shown by the use of respective loss-of-function mutants. Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry of mycelial solvent extracts provided sets of molecular ions corresponding to HFB-1b, HFB-2a, HFB-2b, and HFB-5a in their oxidized and processed forms. These in silico-deduced sequences of the hydrophobins indicate cleavages at known signal peptide sites as well as additional N- and C-terminal processing. Mass peaks observed during confrontation with plant-pathogenic fungi indicate further proteolytic attack on the hydrophobins. Our study illustrates both divergent and redundant functions of the 10 hydrophobins of H. atroviridis.
Nature Biotechnology | 1993
Yair Aharonowitz; Jürgen Bergmeyer; Jesus M. Cantoral; Gerald Cohen; Arnold L. Demain; Uwe Fink; Jim Kinghorn; Horst Kleinkauf; Andrew MacCabe; Harriet Palissa; Eva Pfeifer; Torsten Schwecke; Henk van Liempt; Hans von Döhren; Saul Wolfe; Jinyou Zhang
Biochemical Journal | 2003
Heike Sielaff; Elke Dittmann; Nicole Tandeau de Marsac; Christiane Bouchier; Hans von Döhren; Thomas Börner; Torsten Schwecke
FEBS Journal | 1992
Torsten Schwecke; Yair Aharonowitz; Harriet Palissa; Hans von Döhren; Horst Kleinkauf; Henk van Liempt
Chemistry & Biodiversity | 2007
Torsten Neuhof; Albrecht Berg; H. Besl; Torsten Schwecke; Ralf Dieckmann; H. von Döhren
Journal of Peptide Science | 2003
Kathrin Reiber; Torsten Neuhof; Jörg H. Ozegowski; Hans von Döhren; Torsten Schwecke