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Enzymes which regulate the metabolic reactions for sustaining all living things, are the engines of life. The discovery of molecules that are able to control enzyme activity is of great interest for therapeutics and the biocatalysis industry. Peptides are promising enzyme modulators due to their large chemical diversity and the

Enzymes which regulate the metabolic reactions for sustaining all living things, are the engines of life. The discovery of molecules that are able to control enzyme activity is of great interest for therapeutics and the biocatalysis industry. Peptides are promising enzyme modulators due to their large chemical diversity and the existence of well-established methods for library synthesis. Microarrays represent a powerful tool for screening thousands of molecules, on a small chip, for candidates that interact with enzymes and modulate their functions. In this work, a method is presented for screening high-density arrays to discover peptides that bind and modulate enzyme activity. A viscous polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) solution was applied to array surfaces to limit the diffusion of product molecules released from enzymatic reactions, allowing the simultaneous measurement of enzyme activity and binding at each peptide feature. For proof of concept, it was possible to identify peptides that bound to horseradish peroxidase (HRP), alkaline phosphatase (APase) and â-galactosidase (â-Gal) and substantially alter their activities by comparing the peptide-enzyme binding levels and bound enzyme activity on microarrays. Several peptides, selected from microarrays, were able to inhibit â-Gal in solution, which demonstrates that behaviors selected from surfaces often transfer to solution. A mechanistic study of inhibition revealed that some of the selected peptides inhibited enzyme activity by binding to enzymes and inducing aggregation. PVA-coated peptide slides can be rapidly analyzed, given an appropriate enzyme assay, and they may also be assayed under various conditions (such as temperature, pH and solvent). I have developed a general method to discover molecules that modulate enzyme activity at desired conditions. As demonstrations, some peptides were able to promote the thermal stability of bound enzyme, which were selected by performing the microarray-based enzyme assay at high temperature. For broad applications, selected peptide ligands were used to immobilize enzymes on solid surfaces. Compared to conventional methods, enzymes immobilized on peptide-modified surfaces exhibited higher specific activities and stabilities. Peptide-modified surfaces may prove useful for immobilizing enzymes on surfaces with optimized orientation, location and performance, which are of great interest to the biocatalysis industry.
ContributorsFu, Jinglin (Author) / Woodbury, Neal W (Thesis advisor) / Johnston, Stephen A. (Committee member) / Ghirlanda, Giovanna (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2010
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Description
The world today needs novel solutions to address current challenges in areas spanning areas from sustainable manufacturing to healthcare, and biotechnology offers the potential to help address some of these issues. One tool that offers opportunities across multiple industries is the use of nonribosomal peptide synthases (NRPSs). These are modular

The world today needs novel solutions to address current challenges in areas spanning areas from sustainable manufacturing to healthcare, and biotechnology offers the potential to help address some of these issues. One tool that offers opportunities across multiple industries is the use of nonribosomal peptide synthases (NRPSs). These are modular biological factories with individualized subunits that function in concert to create novel peptides.One element at the heart of environmental health debates today is plastics. Biodegradable alternatives for petroleum-based plastics is a necessity. One NRPS, cyanophycin synthetase (CphA), can produce cyanophycin grana protein (CGP), a polymer composed of a poly-aspartic acid backbone with arginine side chains. The aspartic backbone has the potential to replace synthetic polyacrylate, although current production costs are prohibitive. In Chapter 2, a CphA variant from Tatumella morbirosei is characterized, that produces up to 3x more CGP than other known variants, and shows high iCGP specificity in both flask and bioreactor trials. Another CphA variant, this one from Acinetobacter baylyi, underwent rational protein design to create novel mutants. One, G217K, is 34% more productive than the wild type, while G163K produces a CGP with shorter chain lengths. The current structure refined from 4.4Å to 3.5Å. Another exciting application of NRPSs is in healthcare. They can be used to generate novel peptides such as complex antibiotics. A recently discovered iterative polyketide synthase (IPTK), dubbed AlnB, produces an antibiotic called allenomycin. One of the modular subunits, a dehydratase named AlnB_DH, was crystallized to 2.45Å. Several mutations were created in multiple active site residues to help understand the functional mechanism of AlnB_DH. A preliminary holoenzyme AlnB structure at 3.8Å was generated although the large disorganized regions demonstrated an incomplete structure. It was found that chain length is the primary factor in driving dehydratase action within AlnB_DH, which helps lend understanding to this module.
ContributorsSwain, Kyle (Author) / Nannenga, Brent (Thesis advisor) / Nielsen, David (Committee member) / Mills, Jeremy (Committee member) / Seo, Eileen (Committee member) / Acharya, Abhinav (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Enzymes keep life nicely humming along by catalyzing important reactions at relevant timescales. Despite their immediate importance, how enzymes recognize and bind their substrate in a sea of cytosolic small molecules, carry out the reaction, and release their product in microseconds is still relatively opaque. Methods to elucidate enzyme substrate

Enzymes keep life nicely humming along by catalyzing important reactions at relevant timescales. Despite their immediate importance, how enzymes recognize and bind their substrate in a sea of cytosolic small molecules, carry out the reaction, and release their product in microseconds is still relatively opaque. Methods to elucidate enzyme substrate specificity indicate that the shape of the active site and the amino acid residues therein play a major role. However, lessons from Directed Evolution experiments reveal the importance of residues far from the active site in modulating substrate specificity. Enzymes are dynamic macromolecules composed of networks of interactions integrating the active site, where the chemistry occurs, to the rest of the protein. The objective of this work is to develop computational methods to modify enzyme ligand specificity, either through molding the active site to accommodate a novel ligand, or by identifying distal mutations that can allosterically alter specificity. To this end, two homologues in the β-lactamase family of enzymes, TEM-1, and an ancestrally reconstructed variant, GNCA, were studied to identify whether the modulation of position-specific distal-residue flexibility could modify ligand specificity. RosettaDesign was used to create TEM-1 variants with altered dynamic patterns. Experimental characterization of ten designed proteins indicated that mutations to residues surrounding rigid, highly coupled residues substantially affected both enzymatic activity and stability. In contrast, native-like activities and stabilities were maintained when flexible, uncoupled residues, were targeted. Five of the TEM-1 variants were crystallized to see if the changes in function observed were due to architectural changes to the active site. In a second project, a computational platform using RosettaDesign was developed to remodel the firefly luciferase active site to accommodate novel luciferins. This platform resulted in the development of five luciferin-luciferase pairs with red-shifted emission maxima, ready for multicomponent bioluminescent imaging applications in tissues. Although the projects from this work focus on two classes of proteins, they provide insight into the structure-function relationship of ligand specificity in enzymes and are broadly applicable to other systems.
ContributorsKolbaba Kartchner, Bethany (Author) / Mills, Jeremy H (Thesis advisor) / Ghirlanda, Giovanna (Committee member) / Van Horn, Wade D (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Sutures, staples, and tissue glues remain the primary means of tissue approximation and vessel ligation. Laser-activated tissue sealing is an alternative approach that conventionally employs light-absorbing chromophores and nanoparticles for converting near-infrared (NIR) laser to heat. The local increase in temperature engenders interdigitation of sealant and tissue biomolecules, resulting in

Sutures, staples, and tissue glues remain the primary means of tissue approximation and vessel ligation. Laser-activated tissue sealing is an alternative approach that conventionally employs light-absorbing chromophores and nanoparticles for converting near-infrared (NIR) laser to heat. The local increase in temperature engenders interdigitation of sealant and tissue biomolecules, resulting in rapid tissue sealing. Light-activated sealants (LASE) were developed in which indocyanine green (ICG) dye is embedded within a biopolymer matrix (silk or chitosan) for incisional defect repair. Light-activated tissue-integrating sutures (LATIS) that synergize the benefits of conventional suturing and laser sealing were also fabricated and demonstrated higher efficacies for tissue biomechanical recovery and repair in a full-thickness, dorsal surgical incision model in mice compared to commercial sutures and cyanoacrylate skin glue. Localized delivery of modulators of tissue repair, including histamine and copper, from LASE and LATIS further improved healed skin strength. In addition to incisional wounds, histamine co-delivered with silk fibroin LASE films accelerated the closure of full thickness, splinted excisional wounds in immunocompetent BALB/c mice and genetically obese and diabetic db/db mice, resulting in faster closure than Tegaderm wound dressing. Immunohistochemistry analyses showed LASE-histamine treatment enhanced wound repair involving mechanisms of neoangiogenesis, myofibroblast activation, transient epidermal EMT, and also improve healed skin biomechanical strength which are hallmarks of improved healing outcomes. Benefit of temporal delivery was further investigated of a second therapeutic (growth factor nanoparticles) in modulating wound healing outcomes in both acute and diabetic wounds. The hypothesis of temporal delivery of second therapeutic around the ‘transition period’ in wounds further improved wound closure kinetics and biomechanical recovery of skin strength. Laser sealing and approximation, together with delivery of immunomodulatory mediators, can lead to faster healing and tissue repair, thus reducing wound dehiscence, preventing wounds moving towards chronicity and lowering incidence of surgical site infections, all of which can have significant impact in the clinic.
ContributorsGhosh, Deepanjan (Author) / Rege, Kaushal (Thesis advisor) / Acharya, Abhinav (Committee member) / Holloway, Julianne (Committee member) / DiCaudo, David (Committee member) / P. Leung, Kai (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Tissue approximation and repair have been performed with sutures and staples for centuries, but these means are inherently traumatic. Tissue repair using laser-responsive nanomaterials can lead to rapid tissue sealing and repair and is an attractive alternative to existing clinical methods. Laser tissue welding is a sutureless technique for sealing

Tissue approximation and repair have been performed with sutures and staples for centuries, but these means are inherently traumatic. Tissue repair using laser-responsive nanomaterials can lead to rapid tissue sealing and repair and is an attractive alternative to existing clinical methods. Laser tissue welding is a sutureless technique for sealing incised or wounded tissue, where chromophores convert laser light to heat to induce in tissue sealing. Introducing chromophores that absorb near-infrared light creates differential laser absorption and allows for laser wavelengths that minimizes tissue damage.

In this work, plasmonic nanocomposites have been synthesized and used in laser tissue welding for ruptured porcine intestine ex vivo and incised murine skin in vivo. These laser-responsive nanocomposites improved tissue strength and healing, respectively. Additionally, a spatiotemporal model has been developed for laser tissue welding of porcine and mouse cadaver intestine sections using near-infrared laser irradiation. This mathematical model can be employed to identify optimal conditions for minimizing healthy cell death while still achieving a strong seal of the ruptured tissue using laser welding. Finally, in a model of surgical site infection, laser-responsive nanomaterials were shown to be efficacious in inhibiting bacterial growth. By incorporating an anti-microbial functionality to laser-responsive nanocomposites, these materials will serve as a treatment modality in sealing tissue, healing tissue, and protecting tissue in surgery.
ContributorsUrie, Russell Ricks (Author) / Rege, Kaushal (Thesis advisor) / Acharya, Abhinav (Committee member) / DeNardo, Dale (Committee member) / Holloway, Julianne (Committee member) / Thomas, Marylaura (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019