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Lena Keller

Helmholtz Institute for Pharmaceutical Research Saarland

ORCID: 0000-0003-2899-1232

Publishes on Microbial Natural Products and Biosynthesis, Marine Sponges and Natural Products, Synthetic Organic Chemistry Methods. 25 papers and 494 citations.

25Publications
494Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Development of a Potent Inhibitor of the <i>Plasmodium</i> Proteasome with Reduced Mammalian Toxicity
Gregory LaMonte, Jehad Almaliti, Betsaida Bibo‐Verdugo et al.|Journal of Medicinal Chemistry|2017
Cited by 98Open Access

Naturally derived chemical compounds are the foundation of much of our pharmacopeia, especially in antiproliferative and anti-infective drug classes. Here, we report that a naturally derived molecule called carmaphycin B is a potent inhibitor against both the asexual and sexual blood stages of malaria infection. Using a combination of in silico molecular docking and in vitro directed evolution in a well-characterized drug-sensitive yeast model, we determined that these compounds target the β5 subunit of the proteasome. These studies were validated using in vitro inhibition assays with proteasomes isolated from Plasmodium falciparum. As carmaphycin B is toxic to mammalian cells, we synthesized a series of chemical analogs that reduce host cell toxicity while maintaining blood-stage and gametocytocidal antimalarial activity and proteasome inhibition. This study describes a promising new class of antimalarial compound based on the carmaphycin B scaffold, as well as several chemical structural features that serve to enhance antimalarial specificity.

Biosynthesis and Heterologous Production of Vioprolides: Rational Biosynthetic Engineering and Unprecedented 4‐Methylazetidinecarboxylic Acid Formation
Fu Yan, David S. Auerbach, Yi Chai et al.|Angewandte Chemie International Edition|2018
Cited by 75

Abstract Vioprolides are a promising class of anticancer and antifungal lead compounds produced by the myxobacterium Cystobacter violaceus Cb vi35. Previously nothing had been reported about their biosynthesis, including the origin of the unusual 4‐methylazetidinecarboxylic acid (MAZ) moiety. We describe the vioprolide biosynthetic gene cluster and solve the production obstacle by expression in three heterologous hosts. Starting from unstable production in the wild type at the single‐digit mg L −1 scale, we developed a stable host that eventually allowed for yields of up to half a gram per liter in fermenters. Gene inactivations coupled with isotope feeding studies identified an S‐adenosylmethionine (SAM)‐dependent enzyme and a methyltransferase as being responsible for the generation of the MAZ building block by a proposed mechanism unprecedented in bacteria. Furthermore, nonnatural vioprolide derivatives were generated via rational genetic engineering.

Biosynthetic Studies of Telomycin Reveal New Lipopeptides with Enhanced Activity
Chengzhang Fu, Lena Keller, Armin Bauer et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2015
Cited by 73

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.

Tutuilamides A–C: Vinyl-Chloride-Containing Cyclodepsipeptides from Marine Cyanobacteria with Potent Elastase Inhibitory Properties
Lena Keller, Kirley Marques Canuto, Chenxi Liu et al.|ACS Chemical Biology|2020
Cited by 54Open Access

Marine cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) have been shown to possess an enormous capacity to produce structurally diverse natural products that exhibit a broad spectrum of potent biological activities, including cytotoxic, antifungal, antiparasitic, antiviral, and antibacterial activities. Using mass-spectrometry-guided fractionation together with molecular networking, cyanobacterial field collections from American Samoa and Palmyra Atoll yielded three new cyclic peptides, tutuilamides A-C. Their structures were established by spectroscopic techniques including 1D and 2D NMR, HR-MS, and chemical derivatization. Structure elucidation was facilitated by employing advanced NMR techniques including nonuniform sampling in combination with the 1,1-ADEQUATE experiment. These cyclic peptides are characterized by the presence of several unusual residues including 3-amino-6-hydroxy-2-piperidone and 2-amino-2-butenoic acid, together with a novel vinyl chloride-containing residue. Tutuilamides A-C show potent elastase inhibitory activity together with moderate potency in H-460 lung cancer cell cytotoxicity assays. The binding mode to elastase was analyzed by X-ray crystallography revealing a reversible binding mode similar to the natural product lyngbyastatin 7. The presence of an additional hydrogen bond with the amino acid backbone of the flexible side chain of tutuilamide A, compared to lyngbyastatin 7, facilitates its stabilization in the elastase binding pocket and possibly explains its enhanced inhibitory potency.

Alexithymia predicts maladaptive but not adaptive emotion regulation strategies in adolescent girls with anorexia nervosa or depression
Anca Sfärlea, Sandra Dehning, Lena Keller et al.|Journal of Eating Disorders|2019
Cited by 46Open Access

BACKGROUND: Among adolescent girls, anorexia nervosa (AN) and major depression (MD) are common and often comorbid mental health problems. Both disorders are characterised by difficulties in recognising and verbalising (alexithymia) as well as regulating one's emotions, but research in adolescent patients is scarce and little is known about the relation between alexithymia and difficulties in emotion regulation. The aims of this study were to investigate alexithymia and emotion regulation skills in adolescents with AN, adolescents with MD, and healthy adolescents, and to determine whether alexithymia functions as a predictor for emotion regulation skills. METHODS: = 35). Groups were compared with respect to the these variables and multiple regression analyses were calculated separately for adaptive and maladaptive emotion regulation strategies in order to examine if alexithymia predicted emotion regulation over and above age and depressive symptoms. RESULTS: Girls with AN or MD both reported using adaptive emotion regulation strategies less frequently and maladaptive emotion regulation skills more frequently as well as higher levels of alexithymia compared to healthy girls. Alexithymia positively predicted maladaptive emotion regulation strategies, while depressive symptoms negatively predicted adaptive emotion regulation strategies. CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest that different mechanisms may underlie the lack of adaptive and the surplus of maladaptive emotion regulation strategies in adolescent psychiatric patients.