30 results match your criteria: "6600 College Station[Affiliation]"
Curr Opin Chem Biol
June 2024
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, ME 04011, USA. Electronic address:
Bacterial cells are covered by a complex carbohydrate coat of armor that allows bacteria to thrive in a range of environments. As a testament to the importance of bacterial glycans, effective and heavily utilized antibiotics including penicillin and vancomycin target and disrupt the bacterial glycocalyx. Despite their importance, the study of bacterial glycans lags far behind their eukaryotic counterparts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Infect Dis
October 2023
Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, Maine 04011, United States.
Glycans that coat the surface of bacteria are compelling antibiotic targets because they contain distinct monosaccharides that are linked to pathogenesis and are absent in human cells. Disrupting glycan biosynthesis presents a path to inhibiting the ability of a bacterium to infect the host. We previously demonstrated that O-glycosides act as metabolic inhibitors and disrupt bacterial glycan biosynthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIsr J Chem
February 2023
Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, ME 04011 USA.
Bacteria coat themselves with a dense array of cell envelope glycans that enhance bacterial fitness and promote survival. Despite the importance of bacterial glycans, their systematic study and perturbation remains challenging. Chemical tools have made important inroads toward understanding and altering bacterial glycans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Infect Dis
April 2022
Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, Maine 04011, United States.
Bacterial cell envelope glycans are compelling antibiotic targets as they are critical for strain fitness and pathogenesis yet are virtually absent from human cells. However, systematic study and perturbation of bacterial glycans remains challenging due to their utilization of rare deoxy amino l-sugars, which impede traditional glycan analysis and are not readily available from natural sources. The development of chemical tools to study bacterial glycans is a crucial step toward understanding and altering these biomolecules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioorg Med Chem
July 2021
Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, ME 04011, USA. Electronic address:
The bacterial glycocalyx is a quintessential drug target comprised of structurally distinct glycans. Bacterial glycans bear unusual monosaccharide building blocks whose proper construction is critical for bacterial fitness, survival, and colonization in the human host. Despite their appeal as therapeutic targets, bacterial glycans are difficult to study due to the presence of rare bacterial monosaccharides that are linked and modified in atypical manners.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Infect Dis
December 2020
Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, Maine 04011, United States.
Bacterial cell surface glycans are quintessential drug targets due to their critical role in colonization of the host, pathogen survival, and immune evasion. The dense cell envelope glycocalyx contains distinctive monosaccharides that are stitched together into higher order glycans to yield exclusively bacterial structures that are critical for strain fitness and pathogenesis. However, the systematic study and inhibition of bacterial glycosylation enzymes remains challenging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGen Comp Endocrinol
December 2020
Pest Management and Biocontrol Research Unit, US Arid Land Agricultural Research Center, USDA Agricultural Research Services, Maricopa, AZ 85138, USA. Electronic address:
Over the past decade, in silico genome and transcriptome mining has led to the identification of many new crustacean peptide families, including the agatoxin-like peptides (ALPs), a group named for their structural similarity to agatoxin, a spider venom component. Here, analysis of publicly accessible transcriptomes was used to expand our understanding of crustacean ALPs. Specifically, transcriptome mining was used to investigate the phylogenetic/structural conservation, tissue localization, and putative functions of ALPs in decapod species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Sci
January 2020
Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Bowdoin College 6600 College Station Brunswick ME 04011 USA
The bacterial cell wall is a quintessential drug target due to its critical role in colonization of the host, pathogen survival, and immune evasion. The dense cell wall glycocalyx contains distinctive monosaccharides that are absent from human cells, and proper assembly of monosaccharides into higher-order glycans is critical for bacterial fitness and pathogenesis. However, the systematic study and inhibition of bacterial glycosylation enzymes remains challenging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Infect Dis
October 2019
Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry , Bowdoin College , 6600 College Station, Brunswick , Maine 04011 , United States.
() infection poses a worldwide public health crisis, as chronic infection is rampant and can lead to gastric ulcers, gastritis, and gastric cancer. Unfortunately, frontline therapies cause harmful side effects and are often ineffective due to antibiotic resistance. The FDA-approved drug auranofin is a gold complex with a Au(I) core coordinated with triethylphosphine and peracetylated thioglucose as the ligands.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGen Comp Endocrinol
October 2019
Békésy Laboratory of Neurobiology, Pacific Biosciences Research Center, School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1993 East-West Road, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA.
The SIFamides are a broadly conserved arthropod peptide family characterized by the C-terminal motif -SIFamide. In decapod crustaceans, two isoforms of SIFamide are known, GYRKPPFNGSIFamide (Gly-SIFamide), which is nearly ubiquitously conserved in the order, and VYRKPPFNGSIFamide (Val-SIFamide), known only from members of the astacidean genus Homarus. While much work has focused on the identification of SIFamide isoforms in decapods, there are few direct demonstrations of physiological function for members of the peptide family in this taxon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Biol
January 2019
Békésy Laboratory of Neurobiology, Pacific Biosciences Research Center, School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1993 East-West Road, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822, USA.
Recent genomic/transcriptomic studies have identified a novel peptide family whose members share the carboxyl terminal sequence -GSEFLamide. However, the presence/identity of the predicted isoforms of this peptide group have yet to be confirmed biochemically, and no physiological function has yet been ascribed to any member of this peptide family. To determine the extent to which GSEFLamides are conserved within the Arthropoda, we searched publicly accessible databases for genomic/transcriptomic evidence of their presence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Immunol
September 2018
Department of Chemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, ME 04011, United States. Electronic address:
We report on the characterization of the native form of an American lobster, Homarus americanus, β-defensin-like putative antimicrobial peptide, H. americanus defensin 1 (Hoa-D1), sequenced employing top-down and bottom-up peptidomic strategies using a sensitive, chip-based nanoLC-QTOF-MS/MS instrument. The sequence of Hoa-D1 was determined by mass spectrometry; it was found to contain three disulfide bonds and an amidated C-terminus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Mol Biol Educ
July 2018
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, Maine 04011.
"Drug Discovery" is a 13-week lecture and laboratory-based course that was developed to introduce non-science majors to foundational chemistry and biochemistry concepts as they relate to the unifying theme of drug discovery. The first part of this course strives to build students' understanding of molecules, their properties, the differences that enable them to be separated from one another, and their abilities to bind to biological receptors and elicit physiological effects. After building students' molecular worldview, the course then focuses on four classes of drugs: antimicrobials, drugs that affect the mind, steroid-based drugs, and anti-cancer drugs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
June 2017
Department of Chemistry, Bowdoin College , 6600 College Station, Brunswick, Maine 04011-8466, United States.
The continued expansion of the fields of macromolecular chemistry and nanoscience has motivated the development of new secondary structures that can serve as architectural elements of innovative materials, molecular machines, biological probes, and even commercial medicines. Synthetic foldamers are particularly attractive systems for developing such elements because they are specifically designed to facilitate synthetic manipulation and functional diversity. However, relatively few predictive design principles exist that permit both rational and modular control of foldamer secondary structure, while maintaining the capacity for facile diversification of displayed functionality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Chem Biol
December 2016
Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Bowdoin College , 6600 College Station, Brunswick, Maine 04011, United States.
Bacterial glycans contain rare, exclusively bacterial monosaccharides that are frequently linked to pathogenesis and essentially absent from human cells. Therefore, bacterial glycans are intriguing molecular targets. However, systematic discovery of bacterial glycoproteins is hampered by the presence of rare deoxy amino sugars, which are refractory to traditional glycan-binding reagents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Process Impacts
August 2016
Department of Chemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, ME, USA.
This work explores the relationship between theoretically predicted excitation energies and experimental molar absorption spectra as they pertain to environmental aquatic photochemistry. An overview of pertinent Quantum Chemical descriptions of sunlight-driven electronic transitions in organic pollutants is presented. Second, a combined molecular dynamics (MD), time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) analysis of the ultraviolet to visible (UV-Vis) absorption spectra of six model organic compounds is presented alongside accurate experimental data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrg Lett
June 2016
Department of Chemistry, Colby College, 5750 Mayflower Hill, Waterville, Maine 04901, United States.
A new peptoid design strategy entailing the concurrent inclusion of enantiomeric side chains enabled the construction of several new structural motifs, including a newly characterized "ω-strand". This new architectural technique significantly expands peptoid structural and functional space and can potentially be applied to other foldameric systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Mol Biol Educ
July 2016
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, Maine, 04011.
Here we present the development of a 13 week project-oriented biochemistry laboratory designed to introduce students to foundational biochemical techniques and then enable students to perform original research projects once they have mastered these techniques. In particular, we describe a semester-long laboratory that focuses on a biomedically relevant enzyme--Helicobacter pylori (Hp) urease--the activity of which is absolutely required for the gastric pathogen Hp to colonize the human stomach. Over the course of the semester, students undertake a biochemical purification of Hp urease, assess the success of their purification, and investigate the activity of their purified enzyme.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Org Chem
November 2013
Department of Chemistry, Bowdoin College , 6600 College Station, Brunswick, Maine 04011-8466, United States.
Peptoids are an increasingly important class of peptidomimetic foldamers comprised of N-alkylglycine units that have been successfully developed as antimicrobial agents, lung surfactant replacements, enzyme inhibitors, and catalysts, among many other applications. Since peptoid secondary structures can be crucial to their desired functions, significant efforts have been devoted to developing means of modularly controlling peptoid backbone amide cis-trans isomerism using side chains. Strategic engineering of interactions between side chain aromatic rings and backbone cis-amides (n→π*(Ar) interactions) is an attractive strategy for stabilizing helical structures in N-a-chiral aromatic peptoids, which are among the most utilized classes of structured peptoids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Cell Proteomics
September 2013
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, Maine 04011, USA.
Virulence of the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori (Hp) is directly linked to the pathogen's ability to glycosylate proteins; for example, Hp flagellin proteins are heavily glycosylated with the unusual nine-carbon sugar pseudaminic acid, and this modification is absolutely essential for Hp to synthesize functional flagella and colonize the host's stomach. Although Hp's glycans are linked to pathogenesis, Hp's glycome remains poorly understood; only the two flagellin glycoproteins have been firmly characterized in Hp. Evidence from our laboratory suggests that Hp synthesizes a large number of as-yet unidentified glycoproteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeptides
August 2013
Department of Chemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, ME 04011, USA.
Neuropeptides are the largest class of signaling molecules used by nervous systems. Today, neuropeptide discovery commonly involves chemical extraction from a tissue source followed by mass spectrometric characterization. Ideally, the extraction procedure accurately preserves the sequence and any inherent modifications of the native peptides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChembiochem
April 2013
Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, ME 04011, USA.
Due to the increased prevalence of bacterial strains that are resistant to existing antibiotics, there is an urgent need for new antibacterial strategies. Bacterial glycans are an attractive target for new treatments, as they are frequently linked to pathogenesis and contain distinctive structures that are absent in humans. We set out to develop a novel targeting strategy based on surface glycans present on the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori (Hp).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Chem Biol
February 2013
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, ME 04011, USA.
Bacterial glycoproteins represent an attractive target for new antibacterial treatments, as they are frequently linked to pathogenesis and contain distinctive glycans that are absent in humans. Despite their potential therapeutic importance, many bacterial glycoproteins remain uncharacterized. This review focuses on recent advances in deciphering the bacterial glycocode, including metabolic glycan labeling to discover and characterize bacterial glycoproteins, lectin-based microarrays to monitor bacterial glycoprotein dynamics, crosslinking sugars to assess the roles of bacterial glycoproteins, and harnessing bacterial glycosylation systems for the efficient production of industrially important glycoproteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Org Chem
March 2010
Department of Chemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, Maine 04011, USA.
Deuterium equilibrium isotope effects (EIEs) for a cage diol and 2,6-dihydroxyacylaromatics and complexes thereof containing intra- or intermolecular hydrogen bonds have been calculated using harmonic and anharmonic vibrational frequencies using Gaussian '03 and the HF, B3LYP, and MP2 levels of theory. The predicted isotope effects have been compared with experimental NMR data, and the origins of the isotope effects have been characterized in terms of zero-point vibrational energy differences and enthalpic and entropic contributions to the free energy difference between labeled species. Reliable free energy predictions based upon harmonic frequencies were found for systems whose isotope effects are governed by bond stretching effects and for systems whose isotope effects are determined by low-frequency vibrational modes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeptides
November 2007
Department of Chemistry, Bowdoin College, 6600 College Station, Brunswick, ME 04011, USA.
Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization Fourier transform mass spectrometry (MALDI-FTMS) has become an important method for identifying peptides in neural tissues. The ultra-high-mass resolution and mass accuracy of MALDI-FTMS, in combination with in-cell accumulation techniques, can be used to advantage for the analysis of complex mixtures of peptides directly from tissue fragments or extracts. Given the diversity within the decapods, as well as the large number of extant species readily available for analysis, this group of animals represents an optimal model in which to examine phylogenetic conservation and evolution of neuropeptides and neuropeptide families.
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