131 results on '"Biomolecular engineering"'
Search Results
2. Understanding microbial biomineralization at the molecular level: recent advances.
- Author
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Debnath, Ankita, Mitra, Sayak, Ghosh, Supratit, and Sen, Ramkrishna
- Subjects
- *
BIOMIMETIC synthesis , *BIOMINERALIZATION , *BIOINORGANIC chemistry , *MICROBIAL cells , *CELL morphology , *BIOMIMETIC materials - Abstract
Microbial biomineralization is a phenomenon involving deposition of inorganic minerals inside or around microbial cells as a direct consequence of biogeochemical cycling. The microbial metabolic processes often create environmental conditions conducive for the precipitation of silicate, carbonate or phosphate, ferrate forms of ubiquitous inorganic ions. Till date the fundamental mechanisms underpinning two of the major types of microbial biomineralization such as, microbially controlled and microbially induced remains poorly understood. While microbially-controlled mineralization (MCM) depends entirely on the genetic makeup of the cell, microbially-induced mineralization (MIM) is dependent on factors such as cell morphology, cell surface structures and extracellular polymeric substances (EPS). In recent years, the organic template-mediated nucleation of inorganic minerals has been considered as an underlying mechanism based on the principles of solid-state bioinorganic chemistry. The present review thus attempts to provide a comprehensive and critical overview on the recent progress in holistic understanding of both MCM and MIM, which involves, organic–inorganic biomolecular interactions that lead to template formation, biomineral nucleation and crystallization. Also, the operation of specific metabolic pathways and molecular operons in directing microbial biomineralization have been discussed. Unravelling these molecular mechanisms of biomineralization can help in the biomimetic synthesis of minerals for potential therapeutic applications, and facilitating the engineering of microorganisms for commercial production of biominerals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Efficient proximal tubule-on-chip model from hiPSC-derived kidney organoids for functional analysis of renal transporters
- Author
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Cheng Ma, Ramin Banan Sadeghian, Ryosuke Negoro, Kazuya Fujimoto, Toshikazu Araoka, Naoki Ishiguro, Minoru Takasato, and Ryuji Yokokawa
- Subjects
Biomolecular Engineering ,Molecular biology experimental approach ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Renal transporters play critical roles in predicting potential drug-drug interactions. However, current in vitro models often fail to adequately express these transporters, particularly solute carrier proteins, including organic anion transporters (OAT1/3), and organic cation transporter 2 (OCT2). Here, we developed a hiPSC-derived kidney organoids-based proximal tubule-on-chip (OPTC) model that emulates in vivo renal physiology to assess transporter function. Compared to chips based on immortalized cells, OPTC derived from the two most commonly used differentiation protocols exhibited significant improvement in expression level and polarity of OAT1/3 and OCT2. Hence, the OPTC demonstrates enhanced functionality in efflux and uptake assessments, and nephrotoxicity. Furthermore, these functionalities are diminished upon adding inhibitors during substrate-inhibitor interactions, which were closer to in vivo observations. Overall, these results support that OPTC can reliably assess the role of renal transporters in drug transport and nephrotoxicity, paving the way for personalized models to assess renal transport and disease modeling.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Supramolecular DNA-based catalysis in organic solvents
- Author
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Gurudas Chakraborty, Konstantin Balinin, Rafael del Villar-Guerra, Meike Emondts, Giuseppe Portale, Mark Loznik, Wiebe Jacob Niels Klement, Lifei Zheng, Tanja Weil, Jonathan B. Chaires, and Andreas Herrmann
- Subjects
Chemistry ,Catalysis ,Biomolecular engineering ,Science - Abstract
Summary: The distinct folding accompanied by its polymorphic character renders DNA G-quadruplexes promising biomolecular building blocks to construct novel DNA-based and supramolecular assemblies. However, the highly polar nature of DNA limits the use of G-quadruplexes to water as a solvent. In addition, the archetypical G-quadruplex fold needs to be stabilized by metal-cations, which is usually a potassium ion. Here, we show that a noncovalent PEGylation process enabled by electrostatic interactions allows the first metal-free G-quadruplexes in organic solvents. Strikingly, incorporation of an iron-containing porphyrin renders the self-assembled metal-free G-quadruplex catalytically active in organic solvents. Hence, these “supraG4zymes” enable DNA-based catalysis in organic media. The results will allow the broad utilization of DNA G-quadruplexes in nonaqueous environments.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Targeting extracellular CIRP with an X-aptamer shows therapeutic potential in acute pancreatitis
- Author
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Wuming Liu, Jianbin Bi, Yifan Ren, Huan Chen, Jia Zhang, Tao Wang, Mengzhou Wang, Lin Zhang, Junzhou Zhao, Zheng Wu, Yi Lv, Bing Liu, and Rongqian Wu
- Subjects
Biomolecular engineering ,Cell biology ,Molecular physiology ,Pathophysiology ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Severe acute pancreatitis (AP) is associated with a high mortality rate. Cold-inducible RNA binding protein (CIRP) can be released from cells in inflammatory conditions and extracellular CIRP acts as a damage-associated molecular pattern. This study aims to explore the role of CIRP in the pathogenesis of AP and evaluate the therapeutic potential of targeting extracellular CIRP with X-aptamers. Our results showed that serum CIRP concentrations were significantly increased in AP mice. Recombinant CIRP triggered mitochondrial injury and ER stress in pancreatic acinar cells. CIRP−/− mice suffered less severe pancreatic injury and inflammatory responses. Using a bead-based X-aptamer library, we identified an X-aptamer that specifically binds to CIRP (XA-CIRP). Structurally, XA-CIRP blocked the interaction between CIRP and TLR4. Functionally, it reduced CIRP-induced pancreatic acinar cell injury in vitro and L-arginine-induced pancreatic injury and inflammation in vivo. Thus, targeting extracellular CIRP with X-aptamers may be a promising strategy to treat AP.
- Published
- 2023
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6. Biotechnology applications of proteins functionalized with DNA oligonucleotides.
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Gokulu, Ipek Simay and Banta, Scott
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- *
PROTEIN biotechnology , *PROTEOMICS , *PEPTIDES , *DNA , *CHIMERIC proteins , *OLIGONUCLEOTIDES - Abstract
The functionalization of proteins with DNA through the formation of covalent bonds enables a wide range of biotechnology advancements. For example, single-molecule analytical methods rely on bioconjugated DNA as elastic biolinkers for protein immobilization. Labeling proteins with DNA enables facile protein identification, as well as spatial and temporal organization and control of protein within DNA–protein networks. Bioconjugation reactions can target native, engineered, and non-canonical amino acids (NCAAs) within proteins. In addition, further protein engineering via the incorporation of peptide tags and self-labeling proteins can also be used for conjugation reactions. The selection of techniques will depend on application requirements such as yield, selectivity, conjugation position, potential for steric hindrance, cost, commercial availability, and potential impact on protein function. The formation of covalent bonds between proteins and DNA has become an important step in a number of emerging biotechnological applications. Native amino acids can be targeted for DNA conjugation, however, this approach can suffer from poor selectivity. Protein engineering, ranging from single site-directed amino acid changes, to non-canonical amino acid incorporation, to the creation of fusion proteins, can be used to increase conjugation selectivities. More advanced conjugation strategies have been developed but these can require expensive oligonucleotide modifications and can suffer from lower yields. The optimal conjugation technique for each application may differ based on limiting factors such as yield, selectivity, flexibility in conjugation position, steric hindrance, cost, commercial availability of oligonucleotides, and risk of altering native protein properties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. R3Design: deep tertiary structure-based RNA sequence design and beyond.
- Author
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Tan C, Zhang Y, Gao Z, Cao H, Li S, Ma S, Blanchette M, and Li SZ
- Subjects
- Computational Biology methods, RNA Folding, Sequence Analysis, RNA methods, Algorithms, Base Sequence, RNA chemistry, RNA genetics, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Software
- Abstract
The rational design of Ribonucleic acid (RNA) molecules is crucial for advancing therapeutic applications, synthetic biology, and understanding the fundamental principles of life. Traditional RNA design methods have predominantly focused on secondary structure-based sequence design, often neglecting the intricate and essential tertiary interactions. We introduce R3Design, a tertiary structure-based RNA sequence design method that shifts the paradigm to prioritize tertiary structure in the RNA sequence design. R3Design significantly enhances sequence design on native RNA backbones, achieving high sequence recovery and Macro-F1 score, and outperforming traditional secondary structure-based approaches by substantial margins. We demonstrate that R3Design can design RNA sequences that fold into the desired tertiary structures by validating these predictions using advanced structure prediction models. This method, which is available through standalone software, provides a comprehensive toolkit for designing, folding, and evaluating RNA at the tertiary level. Our findings demonstrate R3Design's superior capability in designing RNA sequences, which achieves around $44\%$ in terms of both recovery score and Macro-F1 score in multiple datasets. This not only denotes the accuracy and fairness of the model but also underscores its potential to drive forward the development of innovative RNA-based therapeutics and to deepen our understanding of RNA biology., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press.)
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- 2024
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8. Mixed-surface polyamidoamine polymer variants retain nucleic acid-scavenger ability with reduced toxicity
- Author
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Lyra B. Olson, Nicole I. Hunter, Rachel E. Rempel, Haixiang Yu, Diane M. Spencer, Cynthia Z. Sullenger, William S. Greene, Anastasia K. Varanko, Seyed A. Eghtesadi, Ashutosh Chilkoti, David S. Pisetsky, Jeffrey I. Everitt, and Bruce A. Sullenger
- Subjects
Immunology ,Biomolecular engineering ,Nanotechnology ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Nucleic acid-binding polymers can have anti-inflammatory properties and beneficial effects in animal models of infection, trauma, cancer, and autoimmunity. PAMAM G3, a polyamidoamine dendrimer, is fully cationic bearing 32 protonable surface amines. However, while PAMAM G3 treatment leads to improved outcomes for mice infected with influenza, at risk of cancer metastasis, or genetically prone to lupus, its administration can lead to serosal inflammation and elevation of biomarkers of liver and kidney damage. Variants with reduced density of cationic charge through the interspersal of hydroxyl groups were evaluated as potentially better-tolerated alternatives. Notably, the variant PAMAM G3 50:50, similar in size as PAMAM G3 but with half the charge, was not toxic in cell culture, less associated with weight loss or serosal inflammation after parenteral administration, and remained effective in reducing glomerulonephritis in lupus-prone mice. Identification of such modified scavengers should facilitate their development as safe and effective anti-inflammatory agents.
- Published
- 2022
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9. Are museums the future of evolutionary medicine?
- Author
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Philippe Charlier, Virginie Bourdin, Anaïs Augias, Luc Brun, Jean-Blaise Kenmogne, and Erol Josue
- Subjects
paleogenetics ,paleomicrobiome ,evolutionary medicine ,paleopathology ,biomolecular engineering ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Published
- 2022
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10. NYU Tandon researchers create microchips capable of detecting and diagnosing diseases.
- Abstract
NYU Tandon researchers have developed microchips capable of detecting multiple diseases from a single cough or air sample, revolutionizing healthcare diagnostics. These microchips use field-effect transistors (FETs) to detect biological markers and offer faster results, simultaneous testing for multiple diseases, and immediate data transmission to healthcare providers. The researchers are exploring new ways to modify FET surfaces to enable parallel detection of multiple pathogens, with breakthrough technology like thermal scanning probe lithography (tSPL) showing promise in achieving this goal. The study, supported by industry partners, demonstrates the potential for creating portable diagnostic devices that could be used in various settings, from hospitals to homes. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2025
11. Engineering salt-tolerant Cas12f1 variants for gene-editing applications.
- Author
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Daskalakis V and Papapetros S
- Subjects
- CRISPR-Cas Systems, Protein Engineering methods, Mutation, Models, Molecular, Protein Domains, Salt Tolerance genetics, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Bacterial Proteins chemistry, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Gene Editing methods, CRISPR-Associated Proteins genetics, CRISPR-Associated Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
CRISPR has revolutionized the field of genome editing in life sciences by serving as a versatile and state-of-the-art tool. Cas12f1 is a small nuclease of the bacterial immunity CRISPR system with an ideal size for cellular delivery, in contrast to CRISPR-associated (Cas) proteins like Cas9 or Cas12. However, Cas12f1 works best at low salt concentrations. In this study, we find that the plasticity of certain Cas12f1 regions (K196-Y202 and I452-L515) is negatively affected by increased salt concentrations. On this line, key protein domains (REC1, WED, Nuc, lid) that are involved in the DNA-target recognition and the activation of the catalytic RuvC domain are in turn also affected. We suggest that salt concentration should be taken in to consideration for activity assessments of Cas engineered variants, especially if the mutations are on the protospacer adjacent motif interacting domain. The results can be exploited for the engineering of Cas variants and the assessment of their activity at varying salt concentrations. We propose that the K198Q mutation can restore at great degree the compromised plasticity and could potentially lead to salt-tolerant Cas12f1 variants. The methodology can be also employed for the study of biomolecules in terms of their salinity tolerance.Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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12. Efficient proximal tubule-on-chip model from hiPSC-derived kidney organoids for functional analysis of renal transporters.
- Author
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Ma C, Banan Sadeghian R, Negoro R, Fujimoto K, Araoka T, Ishiguro N, Takasato M, and Yokokawa R
- Abstract
Renal transporters play critical roles in predicting potential drug-drug interactions. However, current in vitro models often fail to adequately express these transporters, particularly solute carrier proteins, including organic anion transporters (OAT1/3), and organic cation transporter 2 (OCT2). Here, we developed a hiPSC-derived kidney organoids-based proximal tubule-on-chip (OPTC) model that emulates in vivo renal physiology to assess transporter function. Compared to chips based on immortalized cells, OPTC derived from the two most commonly used differentiation protocols exhibited significant improvement in expression level and polarity of OAT1/3 and OCT2. Hence, the OPTC demonstrates enhanced functionality in efflux and uptake assessments, and nephrotoxicity. Furthermore, these functionalities are diminished upon adding inhibitors during substrate-inhibitor interactions, which were closer to in vivo observations. Overall, these results support that OPTC can reliably assess the role of renal transporters in drug transport and nephrotoxicity, paving the way for personalized models to assess renal transport and disease modeling., Competing Interests: R.Y., C.M., R.B.S., K.F., T.A., M.T., and R.N. are inventors on JP patent application no. 2024–73489 “Construction of proximal tubules micro-physiological system”., (© 2024 The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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13. Are museums the future of evolutionary medicine?
- Author
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Charlier, Philippe, Bourdin, Virginie, Augias, Anaïs, Brun, Luc, Kenmogne, Jean-Blaise, and Josue, Erol
- Subjects
MUSEUMS ,PALEOPATHOLOGY - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Next generation Fc scaffold for multispecific antibodies
- Author
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Bram Estes, Athena Sudom, Danyang Gong, Douglas A. Whittington, Vivian Li, Christopher Mohr, Danqing Li, Timothy P. Riley, Stone D.-H. Shi, Jun Zhang, Fernando Garces, and Zhulun Wang
- Subjects
Biochemistry ,Bioengineering ,Biomolecular engineering ,Structural biology ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Bispecific antibodies (Bispecifics) demonstrate exceptional clinical potential to address some of the most complex diseases. However, Bispecific production in a single cell often requires the correct pairing of multiple polypeptide chains for desired assembly. This is a considerable hurdle that hinders the development of many immunoglobulin G (IgG)-like bispecific formats. Our approach focuses on the rational engineering of charged residues to facilitate the chain pairing of distinct heavy chains (HC). Here, we deploy structure-guided protein design to engineer charge pair mutations (CPMs) placed in the CH3-CH3′ interface of the fragment crystallizable (Fc) region of an antibody (Ab) to correctly steer heavy chain pairing. When used in combination with our stable effector functionless 2 (SEFL2.2) technology, we observed high pairing efficiency without significant losses in expression yields. Furthermore, we investigate the relationship between CPMs and the sequence diversity in the parental antibodies, proposing a rational strategy to deploy these engineering technologies.
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- 2021
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15. Patent Issued for Engineered gyri-like mutein aptamers, and related methods (USPTO 12104201).
- Abstract
Crosslife Technologies Inc. has been issued a patent for engineered gyri-like mutein aptamers, which are non-native variant proteins designed from the Gyrl-like family of proteins. These aptamers, known as GYRAPTs or GYRYZYMEs, can bind to various target organic molecules and function as on/off bioswitches. The patent outlines methods for creating these aptamers through rational mutagenesis or mutant library screening, highlighting their potential applications in molecular imaging, diagnostics, and therapeutics. The Gyrl-like proteins used as scaffolds for these aptamers are small-molecule binding proteins found in prokaryotes and eukaryotes, offering a versatile platform for designing novel biotechnological tools. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
16. Researchers develop affordable, rapid blood test for brain cancer.
- Abstract
Researchers at the University of Notre Dame have developed an automated device that can diagnose glioblastoma, a fast-growing and incurable brain cancer, in less than an hour. The device uses a biochip that utilizes electrokinetic technology to detect biomarkers, specifically active Epidermal Growth Factor Receptors (EGFRs), which are overexpressed in certain cancers like glioblastoma. The biochip is able to distinguish between active and non-active EGFRs and is sensitive and selective in detecting active EGFRs on extracellular vesicles from blood samples. The device has the potential to be adapted for detecting other types of biological nanoparticles and biomarkers for different diseases. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
17. Characteristic ERK1/2 signaling dynamics distinguishes necroptosis from apoptosis
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François Sipieter, Benjamin Cappe, Aymeric Leray, Elke De Schutter, Jolien Bridelance, Paco Hulpiau, Guy Van Camp, Wim Declercq, Laurent Héliot, Pierre Vincent, Peter Vandenabeele, and Franck B. Riquet
- Subjects
Biological sciences ,Biomolecular engineering ,Cell biology ,Science - Abstract
Summary: ERK1/2 involvement in cell death remains unclear, although many studies have demonstrated the importance of ERK1/2 dynamics in determining cellular responses. To untangle how ERK1/2 contributes to two cell death programs, we investigated ERK1/2 signaling dynamics during hFasL-induced apoptosis and TNF-induced necroptosis in L929 cells. We observed that ERK1/2 inhibition sensitizes cells to apoptosis while delaying necroptosis. By monitoring ERK1/2 activity by live-cell imaging using an improved ERK1/2 biosensor (EKAR4.0), we reported differential ERK1/2 signaling dynamics between cell survival, apoptosis, and necroptosis. We also decrypted a temporally shifted amplitude- and frequency-modulated (AM/FM) ERK1/2 activity profile in necroptosis versus apoptosis. ERK1/2 inhibition, which disrupted ERK1/2 signaling dynamics, prevented TNF and IL-6 gene expression increase during TNF-induced necroptosis. Using an inducible cell line for activated MLKL, the final executioner of necroptosis, we showed ERK1/2 and its distinctive necroptotic ERK1/2 activity dynamics to be positioned downstream of MLKL.
- Published
- 2021
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18. In situ observation of mitochondrial biogenesis as the early event of apoptosis
- Author
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Chang-Sheng Shao, Xiu-Hong Zhou, Yu-Hui Miao, Peng Wang, Qian-Qian Zhang, and Qing Huang
- Subjects
Biochemistry methods ,Biomolecular engineering ,Cell biology ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Mitochondrial biogenesis is a cell response to external stimuli which is generally believed to suppress apoptosis. However, during the process of apoptosis, whether mitochondrial biogenesis occurs in the early stage of the apoptotic cells remains unclear. To address this question, we constructed the COX8-EGFP-ACTIN-mCherry HeLa cells with recombinant fluorescent proteins respectively tagged on the nucleus and mitochondria and monitored the mitochondrial changes in the living cells exposed to gamma-ray radiation. Besides in situ detection of mitochondrial fluorescence changes, we also examined the cell viability, nuclear DNA damage, reactive oxygen species (ROS), mitochondrial superoxide, citrate synthase activity, ATP, cytoplasmic and mitochondrial calcium, mitochondrial mass, mitochondrial morphology, and protein expression related to mitochondrial biogenesis, as well as the apoptosis biomarkers. As a result, we confirmed that significant mitochondrial biogenesis took place preceding the radiation-induced apoptosis, and it was closely correlated with the apoptotic cells at late stage. The involved mechanism was also discussed.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Electrochemical biosensing interfaced with cell-free synthetic biology.
- Author
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Wang, Baoguo, Zhao, Jinming, Zhang, Jiayin, Wei, Tianxiang, Han, Kun, and Gao, Tao
- Subjects
- *
BIOENGINEERING , *SYNTHETIC biology , *MICROBIAL fuel cells , *ELECTRONIC equipment , *ENGINEERING , *BIOSENSORS , *ELECTRODES - Abstract
Synthetic biology's multiscale approaches to biosensing facilitate biological detection across diverse environments, leading to the development of advanced bio/electronic devices that convert biological events into electrical signals. Electrochemical biosensors are particularly promising due to their cost-effectiveness, ease of fabrication, and potential for miniaturization. Cell-free synthetic biology (CFSB) utilizes cell-free biological components to engineer and mimic the behavior, functions, and characteristics of cell systems, providing versatile approaches to bioengineering beyond cellular contexts. Engineering electrode surface with the principles of CFSB systems may represent a cutting-edge research direction for electrochemical biosensing, potentially solving bioanalytical issues of selectivity, sensitivity, and biocompatibility. This review highlights the latest trends in creating biosensing electrodes with CFSB components, as categorized by transcriptional, translational, and novel CFSB types. It provides a comprehensive analysis of the benefits and challenges of engineering CFSB components on electrode surfaces, aiming to inspire the future integration of CFSB technologies into electrochemical biosensing research. • Description of the role of cell-free synthetic biology (CFBS) system for bioelectronic surface engineering. • Categorizing and discussing advantages and challenges the CFSB systems for the development of electrochemical biosensors. • Providing new insights on biomolecular engineering of electrode surface for enhanced bioanalytical performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Synthetic phosphorylation of kinases for functional studies in vitro
- Author
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Chooi, Kok Phin, Jones, Lyn H., and Davis, Benjamin G.
- Subjects
572 ,Biomimetics ,Biochemistry ,Organic chemistry ,Chemical biology ,Protein chemistry ,Biomolecular engineering ,Mass spectrometry ,MEK1 ,Cysteine ,Enzyme inhibition ,Protein chemical modification ,Phosphorylation ,Enzyme kinetics ,Protein mass spectrometry ,Site-selective protein modification ,Protein kinases ,Phosphocysteine ,p38α ,Biomolecular recognition ,Enzymatic activity - Abstract
The activity of protein kinases is heavily dependent on the phosphorylation state of the protein. Kinase phosphorylation states have been prepared through biological or enzymatic means for biochemical evaluation, but the use of protein chemical modification as an investigative tool has not been addressed. By chemically reacting a genetically encoded cysteine, phosphocysteine was installed via dehydroalanine as a reactive intermediate. The installed phosphocysteine was intended as a surrogate to the naturally occurring phosphothreonine or phosphoserine of a phosphorylated protein kinase. Two model protein kinases were investigated on: MEK1 and p38α. The development of suitable protein variants and suitable reaction conditions on these two proteins is discussed in turn and in detail, resulting in p38α-pCys180 and MEK1-pCys222. Designed to be mimics of the naturally occurring p38α-pThr180 and MEK1-pSer222, these two chemically modified proteins were studied for their biological function. The core biological studies entailed the determination of enzymatic activity of both modified proteins, and included the necessary controls against their active counterparts. In addition, the studies on p38α-pCys180 also included a more detailed quantification of enzymatic activity, and the behaviour of this modified protein against known inhibitors of p38α was also investigated. Both modified proteins were shown to be enzymatically active and behave similarly to corresponding active species. The adaptation of mass spectrometry methods to handle the majority of project's analytical requirements, from monitoring chemical transformations to following enzyme kinetics was instrumental in making these studies feasible. The details of these technical developments are interwoven into the scientific discussion. Also included in this thesis is an introduction to the mechanism and function of protein kinases, and on the protein chemistry methods employed. The work is concluded with a projection of implications that this protein chemical modification technique has on kinase biomedical research.
- Published
- 2014
21. Prion-derived tetrapeptide stabilizes thermolabile insulin via conformational trapping
- Author
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Meghomukta Mukherjee, Debajyoti Das, Jit Sarkar, Nilanjan Banerjee, Jagannath Jana, Jyotsna Bhat, Jithender Reddy G, Jagadeesh Bharatam, Samit Chattopadhyay, Subhrangsu Chatterjee, and Partha Chakrabarti
- Subjects
Medical biochemistry ,Molecular physiology ,Biomolecular engineering ,Structural biology ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Unfolding followed by fibrillation of insulin even in the presence of various excipients grappled with restricted clinical application. Thus, there is an unmet need for better thermostable, nontoxic molecules to preserve bioactive insulin under varying physiochemical perturbations. In search of cross-amyloid inhibitors, prion-derived tetrapeptide library screening reveals a consensus V(X)YR motif for potential inhibition of insulin fibrillation. A tetrapeptide VYYR, isosequential to the β2-strand of prion, effectively suppresses heat- and storage-induced insulin fibrillation and maintains insulin in a thermostable bioactive form conferring adequate glycemic control in mouse models of diabetes and impedes insulin amyloidoma formation. Besides elucidating the critical insulin-IS1 interaction (R4 of IS1 to the N24 insulin B-chain) by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, we further demonstrated non-canonical dimer-mediated conformational trapping mechanism for insulin stabilization. In this study, structural characterization and preclinical validation introduce a class of tetrapeptide toward developing thermostable therapeutically relevant insulin formulations.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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22. A Biological Take on Halogen Bonding and Other Non‐Classical Non‐Covalent Interactions.
- Author
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Czarny, Ryan S., Ho, Alexander N., and Shing Ho, P.
- Subjects
- *
HOLLIDAY junctions , *PERIODIC table of the elements , *HALOGENS , *MOLECULES , *MOLECULAR structure , *CHEMICAL elements - Abstract
Classical hydrogen bonds have, for many decades, been the dominant non‐covalent interaction in the toolbox that chemists and chemical engineers have used to design and control the structures of compounds and molecular assemblies as novel materials. Recently, a set of non‐classical non‐covalent (NC−NC) interactions have emerged that exploit the properties of the Group IV, V, VI, and VII elements of the periodic table (the tetrel, pnictogen, chalcogen, and halogen bonds, respectively). Our research group has been characterizing the prevalence, geometric constraints, and structure‐function relationship specifically of the halogen bond in biological systems. We have been particularly interested in exploiting the biological halogen bonds (or BXBs) to control the structures, stabilities, and activities of biomolecules, including the DNA Holliday junction and enzymes. In this review, we first provide a set of criteria for how to determine whether BXBs or any other NC−NC interactions would have biological relevance. We then navigate the trail of studies that had led us from an initial, very biological question to our current point in the journey to establish BXBs as a tool for biomolecular engineering. Finally, we close with a perspective on future directions for this line of research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Uncovering the relationship between macrophages and polypropylene surgical mesh.
- Author
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Farr NTH, Workman VL, Saad S, Roman S, Hearnden V, Chapple CR, Murdoch C, Rodenburg C, and MacNeil S
- Subjects
- Humans, Materials Testing, Polypropylenes chemistry, Biocompatible Materials, Macrophages, Surgical Mesh adverse effects, Urinary Incontinence, Stress surgery
- Abstract
Currently, in vitro testing examines the cytotoxicity of biomaterials but fails to consider how materials respond to mechanical forces and the immune response to them; both are crucial for successful long-term implantation. A notable example of this failure is polypropylene mid-urethral mesh used in the treatment of stress urinary incontinence (SUI). The mesh was largely successful in abdominal hernia repair but produced significant complications when repurposed to treat SUI. Developing more physiologically relevant in vitro test models would allow more physiologically relevant data to be collected about how biomaterials will interact with the body. This study investigates the effects of mechanochemical distress (a combination of oxidation and mechanical distention) on polypropylene mesh surfaces and the effect this has on macrophage gene expression. Surface topology of the mesh was characterised using SEM and AFM; ATR-FTIR, EDX and Raman spectroscopy was applied to detect surface oxidation and structural molecular alterations. Uniaxial mechanical testing was performed to reveal any bulk mechanical changes. RT-qPCR of selected pro-fibrotic and pro-inflammatory genes was carried out on macrophages cultured on control and mechanochemically distressed PP mesh. Following exposure to mechanochemical distress the mesh surface was observed to crack and craze and helical defects were detected in the polymer backbone. Surface oxidation of the mesh was seen after macrophage attachment for 7 days. These changes in mesh surface triggered modified gene expression in macrophages. Pro-fibrotic and pro-inflammatory genes were upregulated after macrophages were cultured on mechanochemically distressed mesh, whereas the same genes were down-regulated in macrophages exposed to control mesh. This study highlights the relationship between macrophages and polypropylene surgical mesh, thus offering more insight into the fate of an implanted material than existing in vitro testing., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Single-Chain Lanthanide Luminescence Biosensors for Cell-Based Imaging and Screening of Protein-Protein Interactions
- Author
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Ting Chen, Ha Pham, Ali Mohamadi, and Lawrence W. Miller
- Subjects
Sensor ,Molecular Spectroscopy Techniques ,Molecular Interaction ,Biomolecular Engineering ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Lanthanide-based, Förster resonance energy transfer (LRET) biosensors enabled sensitive, time-gated luminescence (TGL) imaging or multiwell plate analysis of protein-protein interactions (PPIs) in living cells. We prepared stable cell lines that expressed polypeptides composed of an alpha helical linker flanked by a Tb(III) complex-binding domain, GFP, and two interacting domains at each terminus. The PPIs examined included those between FKBP12 and the rapamycin-binding domain of m-Tor (FRB) and between p53 (1–92) and HDM2 (1–128). TGL microscopy revealed dramatic differences (>500%) in donor- or acceptor-denominated, Tb(III)-to-GFP LRET ratios between open (unbound) and closed (bound) states of the biosensors. We observed much larger signal changes (>2,500%) and Z′-factors of 0.5 or more when we grew cells in 96- or 384-well plates and analyzed PPI changes using a TGL plate reader. The modular design and exceptional dynamic range of lanthanide-based LRET biosensors will facilitate versatile imaging and cell-based screening of PPIs.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. A suspension cell‐based interaction platform for interrogation of membrane proteins.
- Author
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Krohl, Patrick J., Kim, Kook Bum, Lew, Lance, VanDyke, Derek, Ludwig, Seth D., and Spangler, Jamie B.
- Subjects
MEMBRANE proteins ,PROTEIN microarrays ,QUESTIONING ,PROTEIN-protein interactions - Abstract
The majority of clinically approved therapeutics target membrane proteins (MPs), highlighting the need for tools to study this important category of proteins. To overcome limitations with recombinant MP expression, whole cell screening techniques have been developed that present MPs in their native conformations. Whereas many such platforms utilize adherent cells, here we introduce a novel suspension cell‐based platform termed "biofloating" that enables quantitative analysis of interactions between proteins displayed on yeast and MPs expressed on mammalian cells, without need for genetic fusions. We characterize and optimize biofloating and illustrate its sensitivity advantage compared to an adherent cell‐based platform (biopanning). We further demonstrate the utility of suspension cell‐based approaches by iterating rounds of magnetic‐activated cell sorting selections against MP‐expressing mammalian cells to enrich for a specific binder within a yeast‐displayed antibody library. Overall, biofloating represents a promising new technology that can be readily integrated into protein discovery and development workflows. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. A multi‐faceted approach to analyzing glucose heat‐degradants and evaluating impact to a CHO cell culture process.
- Author
-
Moore, Brandon, Grinnell, Chris, Boumajny, Boris, Chen, Rachel, Frenkel, Ruth, Vilmorin, Phil, Sosic, Zoran, and Khattak, Sarwat
- Subjects
CHO cell ,CELL culture ,GLUCOSE ,COLORIMETRIC analysis ,LIQUID chromatography ,GLUCOSE analysis ,FORMIC acid - Abstract
Glucose solutions are commonly heated before use in medical and biotech applications to maintain cleanliness, however the resulting degradants can be toxic. This study examines two approaches to evaluating the heat degradants resulting from holding a 40% glucose solution at 55°C for 5 weeks: first, chemical changes to the solution were identified and quantified via analytical testing, and second the toxicity of the heat‐degraded 40% glucose solution was evaluated empirically by using it as a feed stock for a fed‐batch CHO‐cell‐based protein therapeutic manufacturing process. Colorimetric analysis quantified a color change during heating, and liquid chromatography assays measured an increase in the concentrations of two unknown degradants along with the commonly identified glucose impurity 5‐hydroxymethylfurfural (5‐HMF). Solution pH decreased over time, corresponding with an increase in formic acid concentration as measured via GC–MS. Despite this, cell culture toxicity was not observed, and protein productivity and product quality were maintained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The importance and future of biochemical engineering.
- Author
-
Whitehead, Timothy A., Banta, Scott, Bentley, William E., Betenbaugh, Michael J., Chan, Christina, Clark, Douglas S., Hoesli, Corinne A., Jewett, Michael C., Junker, Beth, Koffas, Mattheos, Kshirsagar, Rashmi, Lewis, Amanda, Li, Chien‐Ting, Maranas, Costas, Terry Papoutsakis, E., Prather, Kristala L. J., Schaffer, Steffen, Segatori, Laura, and Wheeldon, Ian
- Abstract
Today's Biochemical Engineer may contribute to advances in a wide range of technical areas. The recent Biochemical and Molecular Engineering XXI conference focused on "The Next Generation of Biochemical and Molecular Engineering: The role of emerging technologies in tomorrow's products and processes". On the basis of topical discussions at this conference, this perspective synthesizes one vision on where investment in research areas is needed for biotechnology to continue contributing to some of the world's grand challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. 10th Royan Institute's International Summer School on "Molecular Biomedicine: From Diagnostics to Therapeutics".
- Author
-
Moradi, Sharif, Torabi, Parisa, Mohebbi, Saeed, Amjadian, Sara, Bosma, Piter, Faridbod, Farnoush, Khoddami, Vahid, Hosseini, Morteza, Babashah, Sadegh, Ghotbaddini, Maryam, Rasti, Arezoo, Shekari, Faezeh, Sadeghi‐Abandansari, Hamid, Kiani, Jafar, Shamsara, Mehdi, Kazemi‐Ashtiani, Mohammad, and Gholami, Samira
- Subjects
- *
THERAPEUTICS , *SUMMER schools , *MEDICINE , *INTERNATIONAL schools , *DEVELOPMENTAL biology , *KERATINOCYTES , *NANOSTRUCTURES - Abstract
Keywords: biomolecular engineering; early detection; molecular biomedicine; molecular diagnosis; prognosis EN biomolecular engineering early detection molecular biomedicine molecular diagnosis prognosis 1 4 4 05/27/20 20200601 NES 200601 Introduction For the past nine years, Royan Institute (Tehran, Iran) has held annual international summer schools to educate and promote key basic and applied concepts regarding stem cells, cancer, personalized medicine, tissue engineering, and developmental biology. The speakers discussed genome-editing technologies, gene- and RNA interference (RNAi) therapies, cancer vaccines, and molecular diagnosis via biomarkers and biosensors. Overall, the summer school highlighted how combination of molecular diagnosis and molecular therapy can provide higher success rates in disease treatment in the near future. Viral and Non-Viral Gene Therapy Piter Bosma explained that gene therapy, that is, delivering genetic material to treat diseases, is accomplished through non-viral or viral delivery systems. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Supramolecular DNA-based catalysis in organic solvents.
- Author
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Chakraborty G, Balinin K, Villar-Guerra RD, Emondts M, Portale G, Loznik M, Niels Klement WJ, Zheng L, Weil T, Chaires JB, and Herrmann A
- Abstract
The distinct folding accompanied by its polymorphic character renders DNA G-quadruplexes promising biomolecular building blocks to construct novel DNA-based and supramolecular assemblies. However, the highly polar nature of DNA limits the use of G-quadruplexes to water as a solvent. In addition, the archetypical G-quadruplex fold needs to be stabilized by metal-cations, which is usually a potassium ion. Here, we show that a noncovalent PEGylation process enabled by electrostatic interactions allows the first metal-free G-quadruplexes in organic solvents. Strikingly, incorporation of an iron-containing porphyrin renders the self-assembled metal-free G-quadruplex catalytically active in organic solvents. Hence, these "supraG4zymes" enable DNA-based catalysis in organic media. The results will allow the broad utilization of DNA G-quadruplexes in nonaqueous environments., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A Combined Experimental and Computational Study of Halogen and Hydrogen Bonding in Molecular Salts of 5-Bromocytosine
- Author
-
Massimiliano Aschi, Giorgia Toto Brocchi, and Gustavo Portalone
- Subjects
5-bromocytosine ,modified nucleobases ,DNA ,biomolecular engineering ,molecular recognition ,halogen bonding ,Organic chemistry ,QD241-441 - Abstract
Although natural or artificial modified pyrimidine nucleobases represent important molecules with valuable properties as constituents of DNA and RNA, no systematic analyses of the structural aspects of bromo derivatives of cytosine have appeared so far in the literature. In view of the biochemical and pharmaceutical relevance of these compounds, six different crystals containing proton-transfer derivatives of 5-bromocytosine are prepared and analyzed in the solid-state by single crystal X-ray diffraction. All six compounds are organic salts, with proton transfer occurring to the Nimino atom of the pyridine ring. Experimental results are then complemented with Hirshfeld surface analysis to quantitively evaluate the contribution of different intermolecular interactions in the crystal packing. Furthermore, theoretical calculations, based on different arrangements of molecules extracted from the crystal structure determinations, are carried out to analyze the formation mechanism of halogen bonds (XBs) in these compounds and provide insights into the nature and strength of the observed interactions. The results show that the supramolecular architectures of the six molecular salts involve extensive classical intermolecular hydrogen bonds. However, in all but one proton-transfer adducts, weak to moderate XBs are revealed by C–Br…O short contacts between the bromine atom in the fifth position, which acts as XB donor (electron acceptor). Moreover, the lone pair electrons of the oxygen atom of adjacent pyrimidine nucleobases and/or counterions or water molecules, which acts as XB acceptor (electron donor).
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Strategies for Engineering Natural Product Biosynthesis in Fungi.
- Author
-
Skellam, Elizabeth
- Subjects
- *
BIOSYNTHESIS , *NATURAL products , *FUNGI , *FUNGAL genes , *FUNGAL genomes , *BIOACTIVE compounds , *FUNGAL biotechnology - Abstract
Fungi are a prolific source of bioactive compounds, some of which have been developed as essential medicines and life-enhancing drugs. Genome sequencing has revealed that fungi have the potential to produce considerably more natural products (NPs) than are typically observed in the laboratory. Recently, there have been significant advances in the identification, understanding, and engineering of fungal biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs). This review briefly describes examples of the engineering of fungal NP biosynthesis at the global, pathway, and enzyme level using in vivo and in vitro approaches and refers to the range and scale of heterologous expression systems available, developments in combinatorial biosynthesis, progress in understanding how fungal BGCs are regulated, and the applications of these novel biosynthetic enzymes as biocatalysts. Highlights The antibiotic penicillin revolutionized human medicine, and now fungal natural products (NPs) play a prominent role in the pharmaceutical and healthcare industries. Fungal genomes host a wealth of biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) that are silent under conventional laboratory culture conditions due to their tight regulation. Widely applicable methods have been developed to activate or modify these BGCs in both native and heterologous hosts and scalable expression platforms have been established. Fungal BGCs can be engineered to reveal biosynthetic intermediates or increase titers of NPs or combined with biosynthetic pathways from other species and/or other organisms to generate 'unnatural' NPs. Investigation of fungal BGCs often reveals unique enzymes with novel activities that can be applied to a plethora of unnatural substrates and developed as biocatalysts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Solving an age-old mystery about crystal formation.
- Abstract
A recent publication in PNAS by Peter Vekilov, a researcher at the University of Houston, has shed light on the process of crystal formation and how molecules become a part of them. Vekilov's research utilized advanced experimental techniques to uncover that incorporation into crystal kinks occurs in two steps, with an intermediate state playing a crucial role in the stability and growth of crystals. This discovery challenges previous theories and could aid in understanding the influence of small parts in a liquid on the shapes of natural crystals. The findings have implications for various fields, including bioengineering, nanobiotechnology, and emerging technologies. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
33. Relationships between hydrogen bonds and halogen bonds in biological systems.
- Author
-
Rowe, Rhianon K. and Ho, P. Shing
- Subjects
- *
HYDROGEN bonding , *HALOGENS , *PHARMACEUTICAL chemistry - Abstract
The recent recognition that halogen bonding (XB) plays important roles in the recognition and assembly of biological molecules has led to new approaches in medicinal chemistry and biomolecular engineering. When designing XBs into strategies for rational drug design or into a biomolecule to affect its structure and function, we must consider the relationship between this interaction and the more ubiquitous hydrogen bond (HB). In this review, we explore these relationships by asking whether and how XBs can replace, compete against or behave independently of HBs in various biological systems. The complex relationships between the two interactions inform us of the challenges we face in fully utilizing XBs to control the affinity and recognition of inhibitors against their therapeutic targets, and to control the structure and function of proteins, nucleic acids and other biomolecular scaffolds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Bioengineering & Translational Medicine
- Subjects
drug delivery ,tissue engineering ,synthetic biology ,biosensors ,biomolecular engineering ,immunotherapy ,Chemical engineering ,TP155-156 ,Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Published
- 2016
35. Mitochondrial protein plays key role in glioblastoma and therapeutic resistance.
- Subjects
MITOCHONDRIAL proteins ,BRAIN tumors ,GLIOBLASTOMA multiforme - Abstract
Out of 577 samples, they found that the CHCHD2 genes had higher expression in tumor cells, compared to non-tumor tissue, and was higher in advanced cases of glioblastoma. Keywords: Animal Science; Bioengineering; Biomolecular Engineering; Bionanotechnology; Biotechnology; Cancer; Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Drugs and Therapies; Emerging Technologies; Engineering; Genetics; Glioblastomas; Health and Medicine; Mitochondrial Proteins; Nanobiotechnology; Nanotechnology; Oncology; Therapeutics; Therapy EN Animal Science Bioengineering Biomolecular Engineering Bionanotechnology Biotechnology Cancer Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Drugs and Therapies Emerging Technologies Engineering Genetics Glioblastomas Health and Medicine Mitochondrial Proteins Nanobiotechnology Nanotechnology Oncology Therapeutics Therapy 607 607 1 10/30/23 20231030 NES 231030 2023 OCT 31 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Veterinary Week -- Glioblastoma is the most common type of brain tumor that affects adults and, unfortunately, still remains incurable. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
36. Drug-filled nanocapsule helps make immunotherapy more effective in mice.
- Abstract
To achieve that goal, the team developed a treatment encapsulating an enzyme called lactate oxidase into a tiny nanocapsule that reduces lactate levels and releases hydrogen peroxide in the tumor. Keywords: Anions; Bioengineering; Biomolecular Engineering; Bionanotechnology; Biotechnology; Cancer; Chemicals; Drug Delivery Systems; Drugs and Therapies; Electrolytes; Elements; Emerging Technologies; Engineering; Enzymes and Coenzymes; Gases; Genetics; Health and Medicine; Hydrogen; Hydrogen Peroxide; Immunotherapy; Inorganic Chemicals; Ions; Nanobiotechnology; Nanocapsules; Nanotechnology; Oncology; Organic Chemicals; Oxidase; Oxides; Peroxides; Reactive Oxygen Species; Solid Cancer; University of California - Los Angeles Health Sciences EN Anions Bioengineering Biomolecular Engineering Bionanotechnology Biotechnology Cancer Chemicals Drug Delivery Systems Drugs and Therapies Electrolytes Elements Emerging Technologies Engineering Enzymes and Coenzymes Gases Genetics Health and Medicine Hydrogen Hydrogen Peroxide Immunotherapy Inorganic Chemicals Ions Nanobiotechnology Nanocapsules Nanotechnology Oncology Organic Chemicals Oxidase Oxides Peroxides Reactive Oxygen Species Solid Cancer University of California - Los Angeles Health Sciences 287 287 1 10/24/23 20231024 NES 231024 2023 OCT 24 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Immunotherapy Weekly -- UCLA researchers have developed a new treatment method using a tiny nanocapsule to help boost the immune response, making it easier for the immune system to fight and kill solid tumors. "Moreover, this dual-action approach improved the success of a specific type of cancer immunotherapy treatment called immune checkpoint blockade and we believe it could be an effective strategy to help make cancer immunotherapy more effective.". [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
37. Lehigh University researchers make sand that flows uphill.
- Abstract
Bioengineering, Biomolecular Engineering, Bionanotechnology, Biotechnology, Emerging Technologies, Engineering, Lehigh University, Nanobiotechnology, Nanotechnology Keywords: Bioengineering; Biomolecular Engineering; Bionanotechnology; Biotechnology; Emerging Technologies; Engineering; Lehigh University; Nanobiotechnology; Nanotechnology EN Bioengineering Biomolecular Engineering Bionanotechnology Biotechnology Emerging Technologies Engineering Lehigh University Nanobiotechnology Nanotechnology 2542 2542 1 10/03/23 20231006 NES 231006 2023 OCT 6 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Health & Medicine Week -- Engineering researchers at Lehigh University have discovered that sand can actually flow uphill. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
38. With $5 million grant, the Welch Center for Advanced Bioactive Materials Crystallization is formed at University of Houston.
- Abstract
Keywords: Bioengineering; Biomolecular Engineering; Bionanotechnology; Biotechnology; Chemical Engineering; Chemistry; Emerging Technologies; Engineering; Nanobiotechnology; Nanoparticles; Nanotechnology; University of Houston EN Bioengineering Biomolecular Engineering Bionanotechnology Biotechnology Chemical Engineering Chemistry Emerging Technologies Engineering Nanobiotechnology Nanoparticles Nanotechnology University of Houston 1703 1703 1 09/25/23 20230929 NES 230929 2023 SEP 29 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Genomics & Genetics Weekly -- Jeffrey Rimer, Abraham E. Dukler Professor of Chemical Engineering, known globally for his seminal breakthroughs that control crystals to help treat malaria and kidney stones, has been awarded an inaugural $5 million Catalyst for Discovery Program Grant from The Welch Foundation, to establish the Welch Center for Advanced Bioactive Materials Crystallization. Bioengineering, Biomolecular Engineering, Bionanotechnology, Biotechnology, Chemical Engineering, Chemistry, Emerging Technologies, Engineering, Nanobiotechnology, Nanoparticles, Nanotechnology, University of Houston. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
39. Celebrating excellence: Inaugural cohort of UH-Chevron Energy Graduate Fellows.
- Abstract
Keywords: Bioengineering; Biomolecular Engineering; Bionanotechnology; Biotechnology; Chemical Engineering; Chemicals; Clean Energy; Deep Learning; Elements; Emerging Technologies; Energy; Energy Generation; Energy Industry; Engineering; Environment; Environmental Engineering; Gases; Geophysics; Hospitals; Hydrogen; India; Inorganic Chemicals; Machine Learning; Mathematics; Nanobiotechnology; Nanotechnology; Oil & Gas; Petroleum Engineering; Physics; Politics; Renewable Energy; Science And Engineering; Sustainability Research; Sustainable Energy; University of Houston EN Bioengineering Biomolecular Engineering Bionanotechnology Biotechnology Chemical Engineering Chemicals Clean Energy Deep Learning Elements Emerging Technologies Energy Energy Generation Energy Industry Engineering Environment Environmental Engineering Gases Geophysics Hospitals Hydrogen India Inorganic Chemicals Machine Learning Mathematics Nanobiotechnology Nanotechnology Oil & Gas Petroleum Engineering Physics Politics Renewable Energy Science And Engineering Sustainability Research Sustainable Energy University of Houston 1030 1030 1 09/11/23 20230917 NES 230917 2023 SEP 17 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Medical Letter on the CDC & FDA -- University of Houston, the Energy University, is proud to introduce the inaugural cohort of UH-Chevron Energy Graduate Fellows - eight graduate students who are actively involved in innovative energy-related research across the UH campus. The potential impact of this research extends to renewable energy generation, electric power transmission and advanced scientific applications, all of which contribute to a sustainable clean energy future. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
40. Next generation Fc scaffold for multispecific antibodies
- Author
-
Vivian S. W. Li, Fernando Garces, Danqing Li, Stone D.-H. Shi, Jun Zhang, Danyang Gong, Bram Estes, Douglas A. Whittington, Zhulun Wang, Athena Sudom, Christopher Mohr, and Timothy P. Riley
- Subjects
Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Effector ,Chemistry ,Science ,Protein design ,Sequence (biology) ,Biomolecular engineering ,Bioengineering ,Computational biology ,Biochemistry ,Immunoglobulin G ,Article ,Structural biology ,Pairing ,biology.protein ,Antibody - Abstract
Summary Bispecific antibodies (Bispecifics) demonstrate exceptional clinical potential to address some of the most complex diseases. However, Bispecific production in a single cell often requires the correct pairing of multiple polypeptide chains for desired assembly. This is a considerable hurdle that hinders the development of many immunoglobulin G (IgG)-like bispecific formats. Our approach focuses on the rational engineering of charged residues to facilitate the chain pairing of distinct heavy chains (HC). Here, we deploy structure-guided protein design to engineer charge pair mutations (CPMs) placed in the CH3-CH3′ interface of the fragment crystallizable (Fc) region of an antibody (Ab) to correctly steer heavy chain pairing. When used in combination with our stable effector functionless 2 (SEFL2.2) technology, we observed high pairing efficiency without significant losses in expression yields. Furthermore, we investigate the relationship between CPMs and the sequence diversity in the parental antibodies, proposing a rational strategy to deploy these engineering technologies., Graphical abstract, Highlights • Crystal structures unveil molecular basis of SEFL2.2 and CPM technologies • Next gen structure-guided design of CPMs to steer HC-HC pairing • Top CPMs show high pairing efficiency and optimal expression and stability • Balancing CPM charge distribution minimizes impact of sequence diversity, Biochemistry; Bioengineering; Biomolecular engineering; Structural biology
- Published
- 2021
41. Targeting extracellular CIRP with an X-aptamer shows therapeutic potential in acute pancreatitis.
- Author
-
Liu W, Bi J, Ren Y, Chen H, Zhang J, Wang T, Wang M, Zhang L, Zhao J, Wu Z, Lv Y, Liu B, and Wu R
- Abstract
Severe acute pancreatitis (AP) is associated with a high mortality rate. Cold-inducible RNA binding protein (CIRP) can be released from cells in inflammatory conditions and extracellular CIRP acts as a damage-associated molecular pattern. This study aims to explore the role of CIRP in the pathogenesis of AP and evaluate the therapeutic potential of targeting extracellular CIRP with X-aptamers. Our results showed that serum CIRP concentrations were significantly increased in AP mice. Recombinant CIRP triggered mitochondrial injury and ER stress in pancreatic acinar cells. CIRP
-/- mice suffered less severe pancreatic injury and inflammatory responses. Using a bead-based X-aptamer library, we identified an X-aptamer that specifically binds to CIRP (XA-CIRP). Structurally, XA-CIRP blocked the interaction between CIRP and TLR4. Functionally, it reduced CIRP-induced pancreatic acinar cell injury in vitro and L-arginine-induced pancreatic injury and inflammation in vivo . Thus, targeting extracellular CIRP with X-aptamers may be a promising strategy to treat AP., Competing Interests: The authors reported no conflict of interest in this study., (© 2023 The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Metabolic Engineering Communications
- Subjects
biomolecular engineering ,bioengineering and manufacturing ,biopharmaceuticals ,biomass and bioenergy ,Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Published
- 2015
43. Loss of Phosphate Determines the Versatility of a Spider Orb-web Glue Ball
- Author
-
Zhao, Yue, Morita, Masato, and Sakamoto, Tetsuo
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. In vitro analysis of essential binding sites on the promoter of the Serratia marcescens spn operon with the quorum-sensing receptor SpnR.
- Author
-
Takayama, Yuriko and Kato, Norihiro
- Abstract
ABSTRACT The N-acylhomoserine lactone (AHL) receptor SpnR is a LuxR family protein that acts as a negative regulator of AHL-dependent quorum sensing (QS). SpnR binds to DNA in Serratia marcescens AS-1 via the spn box; however, the binding affinity of SpnR with the nucleotides on the spn box has not yet been investigated. In this study, we used an spn-box-modified sensor electrode, and quartz crystal microbalance analysis demonstrated a drastic reduction of the uptake of SpnR. The nucleotides G5 and C16 at the AHL-receptor complex-binding site are conserved in Gram-negative bacteria, including the lux box in Vibrio fischeri, the tra box in Agrobacterium tumefaciens, and the spn box in S. marcescens. Indeed, the affinity of SpnR to DNA was reduced to 8% by G5C substitution of the spn box. The affinity of SpnR tagged with maltose-binding protein to the immobilized gene promoter was reduced in the order of C16G and G5C substitutions, which corresponded with previous reports on the lux box. These results suggest that formation of hydrogen bonds at amino acid residues containing guanine at position 5 on a lux-box-like promoter universally contributes to the stability of the receptor complex, whose interaction initiates a sequential QS process in the LuxR family. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2016;113: 2513-2517. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Engineering responsive supramolecular biomaterials: Toward smart therapeutics.
- Author
-
Webber, Matthew J.
- Subjects
- *
BIOMATERIALS , *BIOLOGICAL specimen analysis , *SUPRAMOLECULAR chemistry , *COVALENT bonds , *FREE energy (Thermodynamics) , *BIOENGINEERING , *DRUG delivery systems - Abstract
Engineering materials using supramolecular principles enables generalizable and modular platforms that have tunable chemical, mechanical, and biological properties. Applying this bottom-up, molecular engineering-based approach to therapeutic design affords unmatched control of emergent properties and functionalities. In preparing responsive materials for biomedical applications, the dynamic character of typical supramolecular interactions facilitates systems that can more rapidly sense and respond to specific stimuli through a fundamental change in material properties or characteristics, as compared to cases where covalent bonds must be overcome. Several supramolecular motifs have been evaluated toward the preparation of 'smart' materials capable of sensing and responding to stimuli. Triggers of interest in designing materials for therapeutic use include applied external fields, environmental changes, biological actuators, applied mechanical loading, and modulation of relative binding affinities. In addition, multistimuli-responsive routes can be realized that capture combinations of triggers for increased functionality. In sum, supramolecular engineering offers a highly functional strategy to prepare responsive materials. Future development and refinement of these approaches will improve precision in material formation and responsiveness, seek dynamic reciprocity in interactions with living biological systems, and improve spatiotemporal sensing of disease for better therapeutic deployment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Biomedical applications of collagens.
- Author
-
Ramshaw, John A. M.
- Abstract
Collagen-based biomedical materials have developed into important, clinically effective materials used in a range of devices that have gained wide acceptance. These devices come with collagen in various formats, including those based on stabilized natural tissues, those that are based on extracted and purified collagens, and designed composite, biosynthetic materials. Further knowledge on the structure and function of collagens has led to on-going developments and improvements. Among these developments has been the production of recombinant collagen materials that are well defined and are disease free. Most recently, a group of bacterial, non-animal collagens has emerged that may provide an excellent, novel source of collagen for use in biomaterials and other applications. These newer collagens are discussed in detail. They can be modified to direct their function, and they can be fabricated into various formats, including films and sponges, while solutions can also be adapted for use in surface coating technologies. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl Biomater, 104B: 665-675, 2016. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. In situ observation of mitochondrial biogenesis as the early event of apoptosis
- Author
-
Xiu-Hong Zhou, Chang-Sheng Shao, Qian-Qian Zhang, Yu-Hui Miao, Peng Wang, and Qing Huang
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Mitochondrial DNA ,Reactive oxygen species ,Cell biology ,Multidisciplinary ,Science ,Biochemistry methods ,Mitochondrion ,Biology ,Article ,Nuclear DNA ,Biomolecular engineering ,Mitochondrial biogenesis ,chemistry ,Cytoplasm ,Transcription (biology) ,Apoptosis ,biology.protein ,Citrate synthase ,Viability assay - Abstract
Summary Mitochondrial biogenesis is a cell response to external stimuli which is generally believed to suppress apoptosis. However, during the process of apoptosis, whether mitochondrial biogenesis occurs in the early stage of the apoptotic cells remains unclear. To address this question, we constructed the COX8-EGFP-ACTIN-mCherry HeLa cells with recombinant fluorescent proteins respectively tagged on the nucleus and mitochondria and monitored the mitochondrial changes in the living cells exposed to gamma-ray radiation. Besides in situ detection of mitochondrial fluorescence changes, we also examined the cell viability, nuclear DNA damage, reactive oxygen species (ROS), mitochondrial superoxide, citrate synthase activity, ATP, cytoplasmic and mitochondrial calcium, mitochondrial mass, mitochondrial morphology, and protein expression related to mitochondrial biogenesis, as well as the apoptosis biomarkers. As a result, we confirmed that significant mitochondrial biogenesis took place preceding the radiation-induced apoptosis, and it was closely correlated with the apoptotic cells at late stage. The involved mechanism was also discussed., Graphical abstract, Highlights • Dual fluorescence approach was used for in situ observation of living cell processes • Radiation-induced effects of mitochondrial biogenesis and apoptosis were observed • Relationship between mitochondrial biogenesis and apoptosis was revisited • Assessing early mitochondrial biogenesis is critical for predicting later fate of cells, Biochemistry methods; Biomolecular engineering; Cell biology
- Published
- 2021
48. Human pangenome reference will enable more complete and equitable understanding of genomic diversity.
- Abstract
Creating the pangenome The pangenome was made possible through the development of advanced computational techniques to align the multiple genome sequences into one, usable reference in a structure called a pangenome graph. Because of the methods used in this project, all of the genomes within the pangenome reference are of extremely high quality and accuracy, covering more than 99 percent of each human genome with more than 99 percent accuracy. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
49. Bioengineering
- Subjects
bioelectronics ,bionics ,biosystems engineering ,biomolecular engineering ,biomedical engineering ,biochemical engineering ,Technology ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Published
- 2014
50. A Combined Experimental and Computational Study of Halogen and Hydrogen Bonding in Molecular Salts of 5-Bromocytosine
- Author
-
Gustavo Portalone, Massimiliano Aschi, and Giorgia Toto Brocchi
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Pyridines ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,biomolecular engineering ,DFT ,supramolecular chemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,QD241-441 ,Halogens ,Models ,Drug Discovery ,5-bromocytosine ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,halogen bond ,nucleobases ,hydrogen bond ,molecular recognition: crystal engineering ,Halogen bond ,Crystallography ,Chemistry ,Hydrogen bond ,Electron acceptor ,QTAIM ,Chemistry (miscellaneous) ,halogen bonding ,Molecular Medicine ,Protons ,Supramolecular chemistry ,Electrons ,Article ,Cytosine ,Molecular recognition ,Molecule ,Cysteine ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Lone pair ,Organic Chemistry ,Molecular ,DNA ,hydrogen bonding ,Acceptor ,X-ray diffraction ,modified nucleobases ,X-Ray ,RNA ,molecular recognition ,Biomolecular engineering ,Halogen bonding ,Hydrogen bonding ,Modified nucleobases ,Hydrogen ,Hydrogen Bonding ,X-Ray Diffraction - Abstract
Although natural or artificial modified pyrimidine nucleobases represent important molecules with valuable properties as constituents of DNA and RNA, no systematic analyses of the structural aspects of bromo derivatives of cytosine have appeared so far in the literature. In view of the biochemical and pharmaceutical relevance of these compounds, six different crystals containing proton-transfer derivatives of 5-bromocytosine are prepared and analyzed in the solid-state by single crystal X-ray diffraction. All six compounds are organic salts, with proton transfer occurring to the Nimino atom of the pyridine ring. Experimental results are then complemented with Hirshfeld surface analysis to quantitively evaluate the contribution of different intermolecular interactions in the crystal packing. Furthermore, theoretical calculations, based on different arrangements of molecules extracted from the crystal structure determinations, are carried out to analyze the formation mechanism of halogen bonds (XBs) in these compounds and provide insights into the nature and strength of the observed interactions. The results show that the supramolecular architectures of the six molecular salts involve extensive classical intermolecular hydrogen bonds. However, in all but one proton-transfer adducts, weak to moderate XBs are revealed by C–Br…O short contacts between the bromine atom in the fifth position, which acts as XB donor (electron acceptor). Moreover, the lone pair electrons of the oxygen atom of adjacent pyrimidine nucleobases and/or counterions or water molecules, which acts as XB acceptor (electron donor).
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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