Abstract

Chemical screening using thin-layer chromatography and various staining reagents offers the opportunity to visualize an almost complete picture of a microbial secondary metabolite pattern (metabolic finger-print). A thorough application of this strategy resulted in a number of biologically active new secondary metabolites, although the screening strategy is per se not correlated to any biological activity. In the present paper we report on a novel approach called biomolecular-chemical screening which combines the chemical screening strategy with binding studies of biological relevance. Making use of thin-layer chromatography (TLC) and subsequent staining, biomolecular-chemical screening allows to examine binding properties of low molecular weight metabolites to certain bio-macromolecules. The screening strategy itself, as well as independent validation of the results using DNA as selected bio-macromolecule are presented. The biomolecular-chemical screening method is useful to screen binding behaviour towards DNA of both, pure metabolites by one-dimensional TLC, and crude extracts by two-dimensional TLC. Investigation of pure secondary metabolites as well as screening of crude microbial extracts and new secondary metabolites obtained with this screening strategy are presented in accompanying papers.

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