Publications by authors named "John D Gehman"

This study demonstrates the production of stoichiometrically controlled alkali-aluminosilicate gels ('geopolymers') via alkali-activation of high-purity synthetic amorphous aluminosilicate powders. This method provides for the first time a process by which the chemistry of aluminosilicate-based cementitious materials may be accurately simulated by pure synthetic systems, allowing elucidation of physicochemical phenomena controlling alkali-aluminosilicate gel formation which has until now been impeded by the inability to isolate and control key variables. Phase evolution and nanostructural development of these materials are examined using advanced characterisation techniques, including solid state MAS NMR spectroscopy probing (29)Si, (27)Al and (23)Na nuclei.

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Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is a key technology in the biophysicist's toolbox for gaining atomic-level insight into structure and dynamics of biomolecules. Investigation of the amyloid-β peptide (Aβ) of Alzheimer's disease is one area where NMR has proven useful, and holds even more potential. A barrier to realizing this potential, however, is the expense of the isotopically enriched peptide required for most NMR work.

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The structural characterization of a (13)CO-labeled Ir(I) complex bearing an P,N-donor ligand (1-[2-(diphenylphosphino)ethyl]pyrazole), [Ir(PyP)((13)CO)Cl] is demonstrated using a series of tailored solid-state NMR techniques based on ultrafast (60 kHz) Magic Angle Spinning (MAS), which facilitates correlations with narrow proton line-widths. Our 1D (1)H MAS and 2D (13)C and (31)P CP-MAS NMR spectra provided structural information similar to that obtained using NMR spectroscopy in solution. We employed high-resolution 2D solid-state correlation spectroscopy ((1)H-(13)C HETCOR, (1)H-(31)P correlation) to characterize the networks of dipolar couplings between protons and carbon/phosphorus.

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A dye-release method for investigating the effect of a competitive lipid environment on the activity of two membrane-disrupting antimicrobial peptides (AMP), maculatin 1.1 and aurein 1.2, is presented.

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Vast arrays of structural forms are accessible to simple amyloid peptides and environmental conditions can direct assembly into single phases. These insights are now being applied to the aggregation of the Aβ peptide of Alzheimer's disease and the identification of causative phases. We extend use of the imaging agent Pittsburgh compound B to discriminate among Aβ phases and begin to define conditions of relevance to the disease state.

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We provide an NMRPipe macro to meet an increasing need in membrane biophysics for facile de-Pake-ing of axially symmetric deuterium, and to an extent phosphorous, static lineshapes. The macro implements the development of McCabe & Wassall (1997), and is run as a simple replacement for the usual Fourier transform step in an NMRPipe processing procedure.

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Natural cell membranes are composed of a remarkable variety of lipids, which provide specific biophysical properties to support membrane protein function. An improved understanding of this complexity of membrane composition may also allow the design of membrane active drugs. Crafting a relevant model of a cell membrane with controlled composition is becoming an art, with the ability to reveal the molecular mechanisms of biological processes and lead to better treatment of pathologies.

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Solid-state NMR pulse sequences often feature fewer pulses and delays than the more common solution NMR experiments. This ostensible simplicity, however, belies the care with which experimental parameters must be determined, as solid-state NMR can be much less forgiving of improper experimental set-up. This is especially true of "semi-solid" samples, such as the phospholipid vesicles used to study membrane-associated peptides and proteins, which feature prominently in misfolding diseases.

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Static phosphorous NMR has been a powerful technique for the study of model supramolecular phospholipid structures. Application to natural lipid bilayers with complex compositions, however, has been severely limited by the difficulty in deconvoluting overlapping broad lineshapes. We demonstrate a solution to this problem, using a global fit to a few slow magic-angle spinning spectra, in combination with an adaptation of Boltzmann statistics maximum entropy.

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While neuronal membranes are proposed to be the primary target of amyloid plaques, the effect of phospholipids on fibril formation kinetics and morphology has not yet been resolved. We report that interaction of various compositions with neuronal mimics promoted different processes of fibril formation: negatively charged surfaces increased the lag time and elongation rate in thioflavin T assays, while brain total lipid extract had an opposite effect compared to that in the absence of lipid. Electron microscopy showed thin and elongated fibrils when the peptide was incubated with anionic lipids, while neutral surfaces promoted coarse and small fibrils.

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The interaction of the synthetic antimicrobial peptide P5 (KWKKLLKKPLLKKLLKKL-NH(2)) with model phospholipid membranes was studied using solid-state NMR and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. P5 peptide had little secondary structure in buffer, but addition of large unilamellar vesicles (LUV) composed of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) increased the β-sheet content to ~20%. Addition of negatively charged LUV, DMPC-dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol (DMPG) 2:1, led to a substantial (~40%) increase of the α-helical conformation.

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Effective antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) distinguish between the host and microbial cells, show selective antimicrobial activity and exhibit a fast killing mechanism. Although understanding the structure-function characteristics of AMPs is important, the impact of the peptides on the architecture of membranes with different lipid compositions is also critical in understanding the molecular mechanism and specificity of membrane destabilisation. In this study, the destabilisation of supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) by the AMP aurein 1.

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We report a novel class of self-assembling peptide nanoparticles formed by mixing aqueous solutions of K(16) peptide and a 20 amino acid peptide of net charge -5 (GLFEALLELLESLWELLLEA). Particle formation is salt-dependent and yields perfectly spherical nanoparticles of approximately 120 to approximately 800 nm diameter, depending on buffer composition and temperature, with a stoichiometry of approximately 1:2.5 for the cationic and anionic peptides.

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The solution structure of fallaxidin 4.1a, a C-terminal amidated analogue of fallaxidin 4.1, a cationic antimicrobial peptide isolated from the amphibian Litoria fallax, has been determined by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR).

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Two dimensional multiple quantum (MQ) MAS NMR experiments have become popular due to the wide applicability of this technique to structural questions in materials science, the abundance of half-integer spin nuclei in the periodic table, and the ease of implementation on typical solid state NMR instruments. In spite of the high-resolution theoretically possible from such experiments, the homogeneous and inhomogeneous broadening factors inherent in many samples of interest can make spectral analysis challenging. We present several possible spectral shearing schemes that may be useful for spectral analysis, and in particular we introduce shearing in the directly detected dimension.

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The membrane interactions of four antimicrobial peptides, aurein 1.2, citropin 1.1, maculatin 1.

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Several static structural models exist for gammadelta resolvase, a self-coded DNA recombinase of the gammadelta transposon. While these reports are invaluable to formulation of a mechanistic hypothesis for DNA strand exchange, several questions remain. Foremost among them concerns the protomer structural dynamics within the protein/DNA synaptosome.

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Skin secretions of numerous Australian tree frogs contain antimicrobial peptides that form part of the host defense mechanism against bacterial infection. The mode of action of these antibiotics is thought to be lysis of infectious organisms via cell membrane disruption, on the basis of vesicle-encapsulated dye leakage data [Ambroggio et al. (2005) Biophys.

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A beta (1-42) peptide, found as aggregated species in Alzheimer's disease brain, is linked to the onset of dementia. We detail results of 31P and 2H solid-state NMR studies of model membranes with A beta peptides and the effect of metal ions (Cu2+ and Zn2+), which are found concentrated in amyloid plaques. The effects on the lipid bilayer and the peptide structure are different for membrane incorporated or associated peptides.

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The beta-sheet plaques that are the most obvious pathological feature of Alzheimer's disease are composed of amyloid-beta peptides and are highly enriched in the metal ions Zn, Fe and Cu. The interaction of the full-length amyloid peptide, A beta(1-42), with phospholipid lipid bilayers was studied in the presence of the metal-chelating drug, Clioquinol (CQ). The effect of cholesterol and metal ions was also determined using solid-state 31P and 2H NMR.

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Since their discovery by Bangham and coworkers almost four decades ago, liposomes have become models for biomembranes and vehicles for pharmaceutical, diagnostic, and cosmetic agents. One of the advantages of using liposomes as a drug vehicle is their ability for slow release, thus reducing dosage, localizing a drug, and minimizing its side-effects. Antibiotic resistance is a growing global problem, including for ocular bacterial infection by Staphylococcus aureus, where time is an important parameter that determines the severity of infection.

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A new approach to rotational-echo double-resonance (REDOR) data analysis, analogous to Boltzmann maximum entropy statistics, is reported. This Boltzmann statistics REDOR (BS-REDOR) approach is useful for reconstructing an unbiased internuclear distance distribution for multiple internuclear distances from experimentally limited REDOR data sets on isolated spin pairs. The analysis is characterized by exploring reconstructions on model data and applied to both [1-(13)C,15N]-glycine and a long intramolecular distance in Abeta (16-22) peptide nanotubes.

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Abeta(1-42) peptide, found as aggregated species in Alzheimer's disease brain, is linked to the onset of Alzheimer's disease. Many reports have linked metals to inducing Abeta aggregation and amyloid plaque formation. Abeta(25-35), a fragment from the C-terminal end of Abeta(1-42), lacks the metal coordinating sites found in the full-length peptide and is neurotoxic to cortical cortex cell cultures.

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The solution structure of cupiennin 1a, a 35 residue, basic antibacterial peptide isolated from the venom of the spider Cupiennius salei, has been determined by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The peptide was found to adopt a helix-hinge-helix structure in a membrane mimicking solvent. The hinge may play a role in allowing the amphipathic N-terminal helix and polar C-terminal helix to orient independently upon membrane binding, in order to achieve maximal antibacterial efficacy.

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The relative merits of different isotopic enrichment strategies that might be used in solid state NMR protein structure determinations are explored. The basis for comparison of these merits is the determination of the relative uncertainties in rates measured by a generalized dipolar recoupling experiment. The different schemes considered use (13)C, (15)N and (2)H labeling of ubiquitin with homonuclear magnetization-transfer type experiments under magic-angle spinning (MAS).

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