Publications by authors named "Jason DeChancie"

Glutamate transporters regulate excitatory amino acid neurotransmission across neuronal and glial cell membranes by coupling the translocation of their substrate (aspartate or glutamate) into the intracellular (IC) medium to the energetically favorable transport of sodium ions or other cations. The first crystallographically resolved structure of this family, the archaeal aspartate transporter, Glt(Ph), has served as a structural paradigm for elucidating the mechanism of substrate translocation by these transporters. Two helical hairpins, HP2 and HP1, at the core domains of the three subunits that form this membrane protein have been proposed to act as the respective extracellular and IC gates for substrate intake and release.

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Computations with density functional theory (B3LYP/6-31G(d)) have elucidated the origins of regioselectivities in the Diels-Alder reaction of vinylindene with a 1,4-quinone monoketal reaction that was employed as the key step in the synthesis of fluostatin C. Frontier Molecular Orbital theory and an electrostatic model are applied to the reactions of alkyl-substituted and vinylindene dienes with 1,4-quinone monoketal and acrolein dienophiles. Regiochemical results that deviate from expectation are explained by a progression from electronic to steric control upon the addition of a Lewis acid catalyst.

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The design of new enzymes for reactions not catalysed by naturally occurring biocatalysts is a challenge for protein engineering and is a critical test of our understanding of enzyme catalysis. Here we describe the computational design of eight enzymes that use two different catalytic motifs to catalyse the Kemp elimination-a model reaction for proton transfer from carbon-with measured rate enhancements of up to 10(5) and multiple turnovers. Mutational analysis confirms that catalysis depends on the computationally designed active sites, and a high-resolution crystal structure suggests that the designs have close to atomic accuracy.

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The design of active sites has been carried out using quantum mechanical calculations to predict the rate-determining transition state of a desired reaction in presence of the optimal arrangement of catalytic functional groups (theozyme). Eleven versatile reaction targets were chosen, including hydrolysis, dehydration, isomerization, aldol, and Diels-Alder reactions. For each of the targets, the predicted mechanism and the rate-determining transition state (TS) of the uncatalyzed reaction in water is presented.

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Quantum mechanical optimizations of theoretical enzymes (theozymes), which are predicted catalytic arrays of biological functionalities stabilizing a transition state, have been carried out for a set of nine diverse enzyme active sites. For each enzyme, the theozyme for the rate-determining transition state plus the catalytic groups modeled by side-chain mimics was optimized using B3LYP/6-31G(d) or, in one case, HF/3-21G(d) quantum mechanical calculations. To determine if the theozyme can reproduce the natural evolutionary catalytic geometry, the positions of optimized catalytic atoms, i.

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The unusually strong reversible binding of biotin by avidin and streptavidin has been investigated by density functional and MP2 ab initio quantum mechanical methods. The solvation of biotin by water has also been studied through QM/MM/MC calculations. The ureido moiety of biotin in the bound state hydrogen bonds to five residues, three to the carbonyl oxygen and one for each--NH group.

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A novel conceptual model and unique understanding of rate and endo selectivity enhancements delivered by bis(oxazoline)-Cu(II) Lewis acid catalysts in the Diels-Alder reaction of cyclopentadiene and acrylate imide is presented. Despite previously reported kinetic and spectroscopic studies, the physical reasons for endo selectivity and rate enhancements remain poorly understood. Large-scale density functional calculations using Becke three-parameter density functional theory with the nonlocal correlation of Lee, Yang, and Parr and the 6-31G(d) basis set have been carried out for the first time to understand the geometric and energetic consequences of C(2)-substituent variation.

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The utility of multiple trajectories to extend the time scale of molecular dynamics simulations is reported for the spectroscopic A-states of carbonmonoxy myoglobin (MbCO). Experimentally, the A0-->A(1-3) transition has been observed to be 10 micros at 300 K, which is beyond the time scale of standard molecular dynamics simulations. To simulate this transition, 10 short (400 ps) and two longer time (1.

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