Publications by authors named "Kelsi R Hall"

Lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) catalyze the oxidative cleavage of glycosidic bonds in recalcitrant polysaccharides, such as cellulose and chitin, using a single copper cofactor bound in a conserved histidine brace with a more variable second coordination sphere. Cellulose-active LPMOs in the fungal AA9 family and in a subset of bacterial AA10 enzymes contain a His-Gln-Tyr second sphere motif, whereas other cellulose-active AA10s have an Arg-Glu-Phe motif. To shine a light on the impact of this variation, we generated single, double, and triple mutations changing the His-Gln-Tyr motif in cellulose- and chitin-oxidizing AA10B toward Arg-Glu-Phe.

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Oxidoreductases have evolved tyrosine/tryptophan pathways that channel highly oxidizing holes away from the active site to avoid damage. Here we dissect such a pathway in a bacterial LPMO, member of a widespread family of C-H bond activating enzymes with outstanding industrial potential. We show that a strictly conserved tryptophan is critical for radical formation and hole transference and that holes traverse the protein to reach a tyrosine-histidine pair in the protein's surface.

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Lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) are powerful monocopper enzymes that can activate strong C-H bonds through a mechanism that remains largely unknown. Herein, we investigated the role of a conserved glutamine/glutamate in the second coordination sphere. Mutation of the Gln in AA9C to Glu, Asp, or Asn showed that the nature and distance of the headgroup to the copper fine-tune LPMO functionality and copper reactivity.

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Polysaccharide-degrading mono-copper lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) are efficient peroxygenases that require electron donors (reductants) to remain in the active Cu(I) form and to generate the H O co-substrate from molecular oxygen. Here, we show how commonly used reductants affect LPMO catalysis in a pH-dependent manner. Between pH 6.

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Article Synopsis
  • Transgenic expression of bacterial nitroreductase (NTR) enzymes enhances eukaryotic cells' sensitivity to prodrugs like metronidazole (MTZ), allowing selective destruction of specific cells for research purposes.
  • * The newly developed NTR 2.0 variant shows a significant increase in efficacy, reducing the need for toxic prodrug treatments and overcoming resistance in certain cell types.
  • * This advancement supports more effective studies on cell function, regeneration, and modeling of chronic diseases, along with resources for researchers to utilize NTR 2.0.
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Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) and associated inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) are caused by rod photoreceptor degeneration, necessitating therapeutics promoting rod photoreceptor survival. To address this, we tested compounds for neuroprotective effects in multiple zebrafish and mouse RP models, reasoning drugs effective across species and/or independent of disease mutation may translate better clinically. We first performed a large-scale phenotypic drug screen for compounds promoting rod cell survival in a larval zebrafish model of inducible RP.

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The first total synthesis of (-)-TAN-2483B, a fungal metabolite possessing a densely functionalized furo[3,4-]pyran-5-one framework, is achieved in 14 steps from d-mannose. Generation of the 2,6-pyran is by cyclopropane ring expansion followed by α-selective alkynylation. Julia-Kocienski olefination introduces the -propenyl side chain.

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Selection for a promiscuous enzyme activity provides substantial opportunity for competition between endogenous and newly-encountered substrates to influence the evolutionary trajectory, an aspect that is often overlooked in laboratory directed evolution studies. We selected the nitro/quinone reductase NfsA for chloramphenicol detoxification by simultaneously randomising eight active-site residues and interrogating ~250,000,000 reconfigured variants. Analysis of every possible intermediate of the two best chloramphenicol reductases revealed complex epistatic interactions.

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Objectives: To characterize the activities of two candidate nitroreductases, Neisseria meningitidis NfsA (NfsA_Nm) and Bartonella henselae (PnbA_Bh), with the nitro-prodrugs, CB1954 and metronidazole, and the environmental pollutants 2,4- and 2,6-dinitrotoluene.

Results: NfsA_Nm and PnbA_Bh were evaluated in Escherichia coli over-expression assays and as His-tagged proteins in vitro. With the anti-cancer prodrug CB1954, both enzymes were more effective than the canonical O-insensitive nitroreductase E.

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The first cells probably possessed rudimentary metabolic networks, built using a handful of multifunctional enzymes. The promiscuous activities of modern enzymes are often assumed to be relics of this primordial era; however, by definition these activities are no longer physiological. There are many fewer examples of enzymes using a single active site to catalyze multiple physiologically-relevant reactions.

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