George N. Phillips

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Name: ?Phillips, George
Organization: University of Wisconsin—Madison , USA
Department: Department of Biochemistry
Title: Professor(PhD)
Co-reporter:Tyler D. Huber, Fengbin Wang, Shanteri Singh, Brooke R. Johnson, Jianjun Zhang, Manjula Sunkara, Steven G. Van Lanen, Andrew J. Morris, George N. Phillips Jr., and Jon S. Thorson
ACS Chemical Biology 2016 Volume 11(Issue 9) pp:2484
Publication Date(Web):June 28, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acschembio.6b00348
S-adenosyl-l-methionine (AdoMet) is an essential enzyme cosubstrate in fundamental biology with an expanding range of biocatalytic and therapeutic applications. We report the design, synthesis, and evaluation of stable, functional AdoMet isosteres that are resistant to the primary contributors to AdoMet degradation (depurination, intramolecular cyclization, and sulfonium epimerization). Corresponding biochemical and structural studies demonstrate the AdoMet surrogates to serve as competent enzyme cosubstrates and to bind a prototypical class I model methyltransferase (DnrK) in a manner nearly identical to AdoMet. Given this conservation in function and molecular recognition, the isosteres presented are anticipated to serve as useful surrogates in other AdoMet-dependent processes and may also be resistant to, and/or potentially even inhibit, other therapeutically relevant AdoMet-dependent metabolic transformations (such as the validated drug target AdoMet decarboxylase). This work also highlights the ability of the prototypical class I model methyltransferase DnrK to accept non-native surrogate acceptors as an enabling feature of a new high-throughput methyltransferase assay.
Co-reporter:Fengbin Wang, Shanteri Singh, Weijun Xu, Kate E. Helmich, Mitchell D. Miller, Hongnan Cao, Craig A. Bingman, Jon S. Thorson, and George N. Phillips Jr.
ACS Chemical Biology 2015 Volume 10(Issue 9) pp:2048
Publication Date(Web):May 29, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acschembio.5b00244
Sugar aminotransferases (SATs) are an important class of tailoring enzymes that catalyze the 5′-pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)-dependent stereo- and regiospecific installation of an amino group from an amino acid donor (typically l-Glu or l-Gln) to a corresponding ketosugar nucleotide acceptor. Herein we report the strategic structural study of two homologous C4 SATs (Micromonospora echinospora CalS13 and Escherichia coli WecE) that utilize identical substrates but differ in their stereochemistry of aminotransfer. This study reveals for the first time a new mode of SAT sugar nucleotide binding and, in conjunction with previously reported SAT structural studies, provides the basis from which to propose a universal model for SAT stereo- and regiochemical control of amine installation. Specifically, the universal model put forth highlights catalytic divergence to derive solely from distinctions within nucleotide sugar orientation upon binding within a relatively fixed SAT active site where the available ligand bound structures of the three out of four representative C3 and C4 SAT examples provide a basis for the overall model. Importantly, this study presents a new predictive model to support SAT functional annotation, biochemical study and rational engineering.
Co-reporter:Sherif I. Elshahawi, Theresa A. Ramelot, Jayaraman Seetharaman, Jing Chen, Shanteri Singh, Yunhuang Yang, Kari Pederson, Madan K. Kharel, Rong Xiao, Scott Lew, Ragothaman M. Yennamalli, Mitchell D. Miller, Fengbin Wang, Liang Tong, Gaetano T. Montelione, Michael A. Kennedy, Craig A. Bingman, Haining Zhu, George N. Phillips Jr., and Jon S. Thorson
ACS Chemical Biology 2014 Volume 9(Issue 10) pp:2347
Publication Date(Web):July 31, 2014
DOI:10.1021/cb500327m
Calicheamicin γ1I (1) is an enediyne antitumor compound produced by Micromonospora echinospora spp. calichensis, and its biosynthetic gene cluster has been previously reported. Despite extensive analysis and biochemical study, several genes in the biosynthetic gene cluster of 1 remain functionally unassigned. Using a structural genomics approach and biochemical characterization, two proteins encoded by genes from the 1 biosynthetic gene cluster assigned as “unknowns”, CalU16 and CalU19, were characterized. Structure analysis revealed that they possess the STeroidogenic Acute Regulatory protein related lipid Transfer (START) domain known mainly to bind and transport lipids and previously identified as the structural signature of the enediyne self-resistance protein CalC. Subsequent study revealed calU16 and calU19 to confer resistance to 1, and reminiscent of the prototype CalC, both CalU16 and CalU19 were cleaved by 1 in vitro. Through site-directed mutagenesis and mass spectrometry, we identified the site of cleavage in each protein and characterized their function in conferring resistance against 1. This report emphasizes the importance of structural genomics as a powerful tool for the functional annotation of unknown proteins.
Co-reporter:Shanteri Singh, Aram Chang, Kate E. Helmich, Craig A. Bingman, Russell L. Wrobel, Emily T. Beebe, Shin-ichi Makino, David J. Aceti, Kevin Dyer, Greg L. Hura, Manjula Sunkara, Andrew J. Morris, George N. Phillips Jr., and Jon S. Thorson
ACS Chemical Biology 2013 Volume 8(Issue 7) pp:1632
Publication Date(Web):May 10, 2013
DOI:10.1021/cb400068k
Sugar methyltransferases (MTs) are an important class of tailoring enzymes that catalyze the transfer of a methyl group from S-adenosyl-l-methionine to sugar-based N-, C- and O-nucleophiles. While sugar N- and C-MTs involved in natural product biosynthesis have been found to act on sugar nucleotide substrates prior to a subsequent glycosyltransferase reaction, corresponding sugar O-methylation reactions studied thus far occur after the glycosyltransfer reaction. Herein we report the first in vitro characterization using 1H–13C-gHSQC with isotopically labeled substrates and the X-ray structure determination at 1.55 Å resolution of the TDP-3′-O-rhamnose-methyltransferase CalS11 from Micromonospora echinospora. This study highlights a unique NMR-based methyltransferase assay, implicates CalS11 to be a metal- and general acid/base-dependent O-methyltransferase, and as a first crystal structure for a TDP-hexose-O-methyltransferase, presents a new template for mechanistic studies and/or engineering.
Diphosphate
Riboflavin5'-(trihydrogen diphosphate), P'®5'-ester with adenosine
Calicheamicin
L-HOMOCYSTEINE, S,S'-1,2-ETHANEDIYLBIS-
(2S)-2-amino-4-ethylselanyl-butanoic acid
Butanoic acid, 2-amino-4-[(phenylmethyl)seleno]-, (S)-
L-Homocysteine, S-2-propenyl-
L-Homocysteine,S-butyl-
L-Homocysteine,S-propyl-