Xinyu Liu

Find an error

Name: Liu, Xinyu
Organization: University of Pittsburgh , USA
Department:
Title: Assistant(PhD)

TOPICS

Co-reporter:Zhongyu Cai, Aniruddha Sasmal, Xinyu Liu, and Sanford A. Asher
ACS Sensors - New in 2016 October 27, 2017 Volume 2(Issue 10) pp:1474-1474
Publication Date(Web):September 22, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acssensors.7b00426
Lectin proteins, such as the highly toxic lectin protein, ricin, and the immunochemically important lectin, jacalin, play significant roles in many biological functions. It is highly desirable to develop a simple but efficient method to selectively detect lectin proteins. Here we report the development of carbohydrate containing responsive hydrogel sensing materials for the selective detection of lectin proteins. The copolymerization of a vinyl linked carbohydrate monomer with acrylamide and acrylic acid forms a carbohydrate hydrogel that shows specific “multivalent” binding to lectin proteins. The resulting carbohydrate hydrogels are attached to 2-D photonic crystals (PCs) that brightly diffract visible light. This diffraction provides an optical readout that sensitively monitors the hydrogel volume. We utilize lactose, galactose, and mannose containing hydrogels to fabricate a series of 2-D PC sensors that show strong selective binding to the lectin proteins ricin, jacalin, and concanavalin A (Con A). This binding causes a carbohydrate hydrogel shrinkage which significantly shifts the diffraction wavelength. The resulting 2-D PC sensors can selectively detect the lectin proteins ricin, jacalin, and Con A. These unoptimized 2-D PC hydrogel sensors show a limit of detection (LoD) of 7.5 × 10–8 M for ricin, a LoD of 2.3 × 10–7 M for jacalin, and a LoD of 3.8 × 10–8 M for Con A, respectively. This sensor fabrication approach may enable numerous sensors for the selective detection of numerous lectin proteins.Keywords: biosensors; carbohydrate hydrogels; copolymerization; lectin proteins detection; photonic crystals;
Co-reporter:Andrew J. Mitchell;Noah P. Dunham;Jonathan A. Bergman;Bo Wang;Qin Zhu;Wei-chen Chang;Amie K. Boal
Biochemistry January 24, 2017 Volume 56(Issue 3) pp:441-444
Publication Date(Web):December 28, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.biochem.6b01173
Enzymatic installation of chlorine/bromine into unactivated carbon centers provides a versatile, selective, and environmentally friendly alternative to chemical halogenation. Iron(II) and 2-(oxo)-glutarate (FeII/2OG)-dependent halogenases are powerful biocatalysts that are capable of cleaving aliphatic C–H bonds to introduce useful functional groups, including halogens. Using the structure of the Fe/2OG halogenase, WelO5, in complex with its small molecule substrate, we identified a similar N-acyl amino acid hydroxylase, SadA, and reprogrammed it to halogenate its substrate, thereby generating a new chiral haloalkyl center. The work highlights the potential of FeII/2OG enzymes as platforms for development of novel stereospecific catalysts for late-stage C–H functionalization.
Co-reporter:Wei-chen ChangDev Sanyal, Jhih-Liang Huang, Kuljira Ittiamornkul, Qin Zhu, Xinyu Liu
Organic Letters 2017 Volume 19(Issue 5) pp:
Publication Date(Web):February 17, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.orglett.7b00258
In vitro reconstitution of a newly discovered isonitrile synthase (AmbI1 and AmbI2) and the detection of an elusive intermediate (S)-3-(1H-indol-3-yl)-2-isocyanopropanoic acid 1 in indolyl vinyl isocyanide biogenesis are reported. The characterization of iron/2-oxoglutarate (Fe/2OG) dependent desaturases IsnB and AmbI3 sheds light on the possible mechanism underlying stereoselective alkene installation to complete the biosynthesis of (E)- and (Z)-3-(2-isocyanovinyl)-1H-indole 2 and 5. Establishment of a tractable isonitrile synthase system (AmbI1 and AmbI2) paves the way to elucidate the enigmatic enzyme mechanism for isocyanide formation.
Co-reporter:Qin Zhu
Chemical Communications 2017 vol. 53(Issue 19) pp:2826-2829
Publication Date(Web):2017/03/02
DOI:10.1039/C7CC00782E
Heterologous expressions and purifications of all WelU proteins from the welwitindolinone pathways in Hapalosiphon welwitschii UTEX B1830 and IC-52-3 led to the discovery that WelU1 and WelU3 selectively assemble 12-epi-fischerindole U (2) and 12-epi-hapalindole C (1), respectively, from 3-geranyl 3-isocyanovinyl indolenine (4) via an enzymatic cascade featuring the Cope rearrangement, stereoselective aza-Prins cyclization and regioselective carbocation deposition. In combination with the in vitro characterization of WelU1/WelU3-homolog AmbU4 for the biogenesis of 12-epi-hapalindole U, this study provide a unified view on the origin of the early stage structural diversifications in hapalindole-type alkaloid biosynthesis, post common intermediate 4.
Co-reporter:Dr. Qin Zhu; Dr. Xinyu Liu
Angewandte Chemie 2017 Volume 129(Issue 31) pp:9190-9194
Publication Date(Web):2017/07/24
DOI:10.1002/ange.201703932
AbstractHapalindole U (4) is a validated biosynthetic precursor to ambiguine alkaloids (Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2016, 55, 5780), of which biogenetic origin remains unknown. The recent discovery of AmbU4 (or FamC1) protein encoded in the ambiguine biosynthetic pathway (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2015, 137, 15366), an isomerocyclase that can rearrange and cyclize geranylated indolenine (2) to a previously unknown 12-epi-hapalindole U (3), raised the question whether 3 is a direct precursor to 4 or an artifact arising from the limited in vitro experiments. Here we report a systematic approach that led to the discovery of an unprecedented calcium-dependent AmbU1-AmbU4 enzymatic complex for the selective formation of 4. This discovery refuted the intermediacy of 3 and bridged the missing links in the early-stage biosynthesis of ambiguines. This work further established the isomerocyclases involved in the biogenesis of hapalindole-type alkaloids as a new family of calcium-dependent enzymes, where the metal ions are shown critical for their enzymatic activities and selectivities.
Co-reporter:Dr. Qin Zhu; Dr. Xinyu Liu
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2017 Volume 56(Issue 31) pp:9062-9066
Publication Date(Web):2017/07/24
DOI:10.1002/anie.201703932
AbstractHapalindole U (4) is a validated biosynthetic precursor to ambiguine alkaloids (Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2016, 55, 5780), of which biogenetic origin remains unknown. The recent discovery of AmbU4 (or FamC1) protein encoded in the ambiguine biosynthetic pathway (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2015, 137, 15366), an isomerocyclase that can rearrange and cyclize geranylated indolenine (2) to a previously unknown 12-epi-hapalindole U (3), raised the question whether 3 is a direct precursor to 4 or an artifact arising from the limited in vitro experiments. Here we report a systematic approach that led to the discovery of an unprecedented calcium-dependent AmbU1-AmbU4 enzymatic complex for the selective formation of 4. This discovery refuted the intermediacy of 3 and bridged the missing links in the early-stage biosynthesis of ambiguines. This work further established the isomerocyclases involved in the biogenesis of hapalindole-type alkaloids as a new family of calcium-dependent enzymes, where the metal ions are shown critical for their enzymatic activities and selectivities.
Co-reporter:Xinyu Liu, Matthew L. Hillwig, Leonardus M. I. Koharudin and Angela M. Gronenborn  
Chemical Communications 2016 vol. 52(Issue 8) pp:1737-1740
Publication Date(Web):22 Dec 2015
DOI:10.1039/C5CC10060G
Biochemical characterization of aromatic prenyltransferase AmbP1 and its close homologs WelP1/FidP1 in hapalindole-type alkaloid biosynthetic pathways is reported. These enzymes mediate the magnesium-dependent selective formation of 3-geranyl 3-isocyanovinyl indolenine (2) from cis-indolyl vinyl isonitrile and geranyl pyrophosphate. The role of the magnesium cofactor in AmbP1/WelP1/FidP1 catalysis is unusual for a microbial aromatic prenyltransferase, as it not only facilitates the formation of 2 but also prevents its rearrangement to an isomeric 2-geranyl 3-isocyanovinyl indole (3). The discovery of 2 as a cryptically conserved common biosynthetic intermediate to all hapalindole-type alkaloids suggests an enzyme-mediated Cope rearrangement and aza-Prins-type cyclization cascade is required to transform 2 to a polycyclic hapalindole-like scaffold.
Co-reporter:Dr. Qin Zhu;Dr. Matthew L. Hillwig;Dr. Yohei Doi;Dr. Xinyu Liu
ChemBioChem 2016 Volume 17( Issue 6) pp:466-470
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201500674

Abstract

The anion promiscuity of a newly discovered standalone aliphatic halogenase WelO5 was probed and enabled the selective synthesis of 13R-bromo-12-epi-fischerindole U via late-stage enzymatic functionalization of an unactivated sp3 C−H bond. Pre-saturating the WelO5 active site with a non-native bromide anion was found to be critical to the highly selective in vitro transfer of bromine, instead of chlorine, to the target carbon center and also allowed the relative binding affinity of bromide and chloride towards the WelO5 enzyme to be assessed. This study further revealed the critical importance of halogen substitution on modulating the antibiotic activity of fischerindole alkaloids and highlights the promise of WelO5-type aliphatic halogenases as enzymatic tools to fine-tune the bioactivity of complex natural products.

Co-reporter:Dr. Matthew L. Hillwig;Dr. Qin Zhu;Kuljira Ittiamornkul ;Dr. Xinyu Liu
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2016 Volume 55( Issue 19) pp:5780-5784
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201601447

Abstract

The elucidation of enigmatic enzymatic chlorination timing in ambiguine indole alkaloid biogenesis led to the discovery and characterization of AmbO5 protein as a promiscuous non-heme iron aliphatic halogenase. AmbO5 was shown capable of selectively modifying seven structurally distinct ambiguine, fischerindole and hapalindole alkaloids with chlorine via late-stage aliphatic C−H group functionalization. Cross-comparison of AmbO5 with a previously characterized aliphatic halogenase homolog WelO5 that has a restricted substrate scope led to the identification of a C-terminal sequence motif important for substrate tolerance and specificity. Mutagenesis of 18 residues of WelO5 within the identified sequence motif led to a functional mutant with an expanded substrate scope identical to AmbO5, but an altered substrate specificity from the wild-type enzymes. These observations collectively provide evidence on the evolvable nature of AmbO5/WelO5 enzyme duo in the context of hapalindole-type alkaloid biogenesis and implicate their promise for the future development of designer biocatalysis for the selective late-stage modification of unactivated aliphatic carbon centers in small molecules with halogens.

Co-reporter:Dr. Matthew L. Hillwig;Dr. Qin Zhu;Kuljira Ittiamornkul ;Dr. Xinyu Liu
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2016 Volume 55( Issue 19) pp:
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201603273
Co-reporter:Dr. Matthew L. Hillwig;Dr. Qin Zhu;Kuljira Ittiamornkul ;Dr. Xinyu Liu
Angewandte Chemie 2016 Volume 128( Issue 19) pp:5874-5878
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201601447

Abstract

The elucidation of enigmatic enzymatic chlorination timing in ambiguine indole alkaloid biogenesis led to the discovery and characterization of AmbO5 protein as a promiscuous non-heme iron aliphatic halogenase. AmbO5 was shown capable of selectively modifying seven structurally distinct ambiguine, fischerindole and hapalindole alkaloids with chlorine via late-stage aliphatic C−H group functionalization. Cross-comparison of AmbO5 with a previously characterized aliphatic halogenase homolog WelO5 that has a restricted substrate scope led to the identification of a C-terminal sequence motif important for substrate tolerance and specificity. Mutagenesis of 18 residues of WelO5 within the identified sequence motif led to a functional mutant with an expanded substrate scope identical to AmbO5, but an altered substrate specificity from the wild-type enzymes. These observations collectively provide evidence on the evolvable nature of AmbO5/WelO5 enzyme duo in the context of hapalindole-type alkaloid biogenesis and implicate their promise for the future development of designer biocatalysis for the selective late-stage modification of unactivated aliphatic carbon centers in small molecules with halogens.

Co-reporter:Dr. Matthew L. Hillwig;Dr. Qin Zhu;Kuljira Ittiamornkul ;Dr. Xinyu Liu
Angewandte Chemie 2016 Volume 128( Issue 19) pp:
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201603273
Co-reporter:Dr. Qin Zhu;Dr. Matthew L. Hillwig;Dr. Yohei Doi;Dr. Xinyu Liu
ChemBioChem 2016 Volume 17( Issue 6) pp:
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201600114
Co-reporter:Anirudra Parajuli;Daniel H. Kwak;Luca Dalponte;Dr. Niina Leikoski;Tomas Galica;Ugochukwu Umeobika;Dr. Laurent Trembleau;Andrew Bent; Kaarina Sivonen;Matti Wahlsten;Dr. Hao Wang;Dr. Ermanno Rizzi; Gianluca DeBellis; James Naismith; Marcel Jaspars; Xinyu Liu;Dr. Wael Houssen;Dr. David Peter Fewer
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2016 Volume 55( Issue 11) pp:3596-3599
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201509920

Abstract

Cyanobactins are a rapidly growing family of linear and cyclic peptides produced by cyanobacteria. Kawaguchipeptins A and B, two macrocyclic undecapeptides reported earlier from Microcystis aeruginosa NIES-88, are shown to be products of the cyanobactin biosynthetic pathway. The 9 kb kawaguchipeptin (kgp) gene cluster was identified in a 5.26 Mb draft genome of Microcystis aeruginosa NIES-88. We verified that this gene cluster is responsible for the production of the kawaguchipeptins through heterologous expression of the kgp gene cluster in Escherichia coli. The KgpF prenyltransferase was overexpressed and was shown to prenylate C-3 of Trp residues in both linear and cyclic peptides in vitro. Our findings serve to further enhance the structural diversity of cyanobactins to include tryptophan-prenylated cyclic peptides.

Co-reporter:Anirudra Parajuli;Daniel H. Kwak;Luca Dalponte;Dr. Niina Leikoski;Tomas Galica;Ugochukwu Umeobika;Dr. Laurent Trembleau;Andrew Bent; Kaarina Sivonen;Matti Wahlsten;Dr. Hao Wang;Dr. Ermanno Rizzi; Gianluca DeBellis; James Naismith; Marcel Jaspars; Xinyu Liu;Dr. Wael Houssen;Dr. David Peter Fewer
Angewandte Chemie 2016 Volume 128( Issue 11) pp:3660-3663
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201509920

Abstract

Cyanobactins are a rapidly growing family of linear and cyclic peptides produced by cyanobacteria. Kawaguchipeptins A and B, two macrocyclic undecapeptides reported earlier from Microcystis aeruginosa NIES-88, are shown to be products of the cyanobactin biosynthetic pathway. The 9 kb kawaguchipeptin (kgp) gene cluster was identified in a 5.26 Mb draft genome of Microcystis aeruginosa NIES-88. We verified that this gene cluster is responsible for the production of the kawaguchipeptins through heterologous expression of the kgp gene cluster in Escherichia coli. The KgpF prenyltransferase was overexpressed and was shown to prenylate C-3 of Trp residues in both linear and cyclic peptides in vitro. Our findings serve to further enhance the structural diversity of cyanobactins to include tryptophan-prenylated cyclic peptides.

Co-reporter:Kuljira Ittiamornkul, Qin Zhu, Danai S. Gkotsi, Duncan R. M. Smith, Matthew L. Hillwig, Nicole Nightingale, Rebecca J. M. Goss and Xinyu Liu  
Chemical Science 2015 vol. 6(Issue 12) pp:6836-6840
Publication Date(Web):06 Oct 2015
DOI:10.1039/C5SC02919H
The hapalindole-type alkaloids naturally show striking late stage diversification of what was believed to be a conserved intermediate, cis-indolyl vinyl isonitrile (1a). Here we demonstrate enzymatically, as well as through applying a synthetic biology approach, that the pathway generating 1a (itself, a potent natural broad-spectrum antibiotic) is also dramatically flexible. We harness this to enable early stage diversification of the natural product and generation of a wide range of halo-analogues of 1a. This approach allows the preparatively useful generation of a series of antibiotics with increased lipophilicity over that of the parent antibiotic.
Co-reporter:Dr. Zhongyu Cai;Daniel H. Kwak;David Punihaole;Dr. Zhenmin Hong; Sachin S. Velankar; Xinyu Liu; Sanford A. Asher
Angewandte Chemie 2015 Volume 127( Issue 44) pp:13228-13232
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201506205

Abstract

We report two-dimensional (2D) photonic crystal (PC) sensing materials that selectively detect Candida albicans (C.albicans). These sensors utilize Concanavalin A (Con A) protein hydrogels with a 2D PC embedded on the Con A protein hydrogel surface, that multivalently and selectively bind to mannan on the C.albicans cell surface to form crosslinks. The resulting crosslinks shrink the Con A protein hydrogel, reduce the 2D PC particle spacing, and blue-shift the light diffracted from the PC. The diffraction shifts can be visually monitored, measured with a spectrometer, or determined from the Debye diffraction ring diameter. Our unoptimized hydrogel sensor has a detection limit of around 32 CFU/mL for C.albicans. This sensor distinguishes between C.albicans and those microbes devoid of cell-surface mannan such as the gram-negative bacterium E.coli. This sensor provides a proof-of-concept for utilizing recognition between lectins and microbial cell surface carbohydrates to detect microorganisms in aqueous environments.

Co-reporter:Dr. Zhongyu Cai;Daniel H. Kwak;David Punihaole;Dr. Zhenmin Hong; Sachin S. Velankar; Xinyu Liu; Sanford A. Asher
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2015 Volume 54( Issue 44) pp:13036-13040
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201506205

Abstract

We report two-dimensional (2D) photonic crystal (PC) sensing materials that selectively detect Candida albicans (C.albicans). These sensors utilize Concanavalin A (Con A) protein hydrogels with a 2D PC embedded on the Con A protein hydrogel surface, that multivalently and selectively bind to mannan on the C.albicans cell surface to form crosslinks. The resulting crosslinks shrink the Con A protein hydrogel, reduce the 2D PC particle spacing, and blue-shift the light diffracted from the PC. The diffraction shifts can be visually monitored, measured with a spectrometer, or determined from the Debye diffraction ring diameter. Our unoptimized hydrogel sensor has a detection limit of around 32 CFU/mL for C.albicans. This sensor distinguishes between C.albicans and those microbes devoid of cell-surface mannan such as the gram-negative bacterium E.coli. This sensor provides a proof-of-concept for utilizing recognition between lectins and microbial cell surface carbohydrates to detect microorganisms in aqueous environments.

Co-reporter:Yao Li and Xinyu Liu  
Chemical Communications 2014 vol. 50(Issue 24) pp:3155-3158
Publication Date(Web):23 Dec 2013
DOI:10.1039/C3CC49205B
A series of acid-cleavable ester-type protecting groups, with acid-sensitivity profiles parallel to those of 2-naphthylmethyl (NAP) or p-methoxybenzyl (PMB) ether, were designed and TFA in toluene was identified as a technically simple and effective deblocking cocktail for their global removal in the context of oligosaccharide synthesis.
Co-reporter:Jian-Tao Zhang, Zhongyu Cai, Daniel H. Kwak, Xinyu Liu, and Sanford A. Asher
Analytical Chemistry 2014 Volume 86(Issue 18) pp:9036
Publication Date(Web):August 27, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ac5015854
We fabricated a two-dimensional (2-D) photonic crystal lectin sensing material that utilizes light diffraction from a 2-D colloidal array attached to the surface of a hydrogel that contains mannose carbohydrate groups. Lectin–carbohydrate interactions create hydrogel cross-links that shrink the hydrogel volume and decrease the 2-D particle spacing. This mannose containing 2-D photonic crystal sensor detects Concanavalin A (Con A) through shifts in the 2-D diffraction wavelength. Con A concentrations can be determined by measuring the diffracted wavelength or visually determined from the change in the sensor diffraction color. The concentrations are easily monitored by measuring the 2-D array Debye ring diameter. Our observed detection limit for Con A is 0.02 mg/mL (0.7 μM). The 2-D photonic crystal sensors are completely reversible and can monitor Con A solution concentration changes.
Co-reporter:Matthew L. Hillwig, Qin Zhu, and Xinyu Liu
ACS Chemical Biology 2014 Volume 9(Issue 2) pp:372
Publication Date(Web):November 1, 2013
DOI:10.1021/cb400681n
Ambiguines belong to a family of hapalindole-type indole alkaloid natural products, with many of the members possessing up to eight consecutive carbon stereocenters in a fused pentacyclic 6-6-6-5-7 ring scaffold. Here, we report the identification of a 42 kbp ambiguine (amb) biosynthetic gene cluster that harbors 32 protein-coding genes in its native producer Fischerella ambigua UTEX1903. Association of the amb cluster with ambiguine biosynthesis was confirmed by both bioinformatic analysis and in vitro characterizations of enzymes responsible for 3-((Z)-2′-isocyanoethenyl) indole and geranyl pyrophosphate biosynthesis and a C-2 indole dimethylallyltransferase that regiospecifically tailors hapalindole G to ambiguine A. The presence of five nonheme iron-dependent oxygenase coding genes (including four Rieske-type oxygenases) within the amb cluster suggests late-stage C–H activations are likely responsible for the structural diversities of ambiguines by regio- and stereospecific chlorination, hydroxylation, epoxidation, and sp2–sp3 C–C bond formation.
Co-reporter:Dr. Matthew L. Hillwig;Heather A. Fuhrman;Kuljira Ittiamornkul;Tyler J. Sevco;Daniel H. Kwak ; Dr. Xinyu Liu
ChemBioChem 2014 Volume 15( Issue 5) pp:665-669
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201300794

Abstract

The identification of a 36 kb welwitindolinone (wel) biosynthetic gene cluster in Hapalosiphon welwitschii UTEX B1830 is reported. Characterization of the enzymes responsible for assembling the early biosynthetic intermediates geranyl pyrophosphate and 3-((Z)-2′-isocyanoethenyl)indole as well as a dedicated N-methyltransferase in the maturation of N-methylwelwitindolinone C isothiocyanate solidified the link between the wel pathway and welwitindolinone biosynthesis. Comparative analysis of the ambiguine and welwitindolinone biosynthetic pathways in two different organisms provided insights into the origins of diverse structures within hapalindole-type molecules.

Co-reporter:Dr. Matthew L. Hillwig;Heather A. Fuhrman;Kuljira Ittiamornkul;Tyler J. Sevco;Daniel H. Kwak ; Dr. Xinyu Liu
ChemBioChem 2014 Volume 15( Issue 5) pp:
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201490013
Co-reporter:Yao Li, Bimalendu Roy and Xinyu Liu  
Chemical Communications 2011 vol. 47(Issue 31) pp:8952-8954
Publication Date(Web):07 Jul 2011
DOI:10.1039/C1CC13264D
A new method for selective cleavage of 2-naphthylmethyl (NAP) ether utilizing 10–20 molar excess of HF/pyridine in toluene was revealed and strategically applied to a divergent approach towards generation of a high-mannose type oligosaccharide library.
Co-reporter:Kuljira Ittiamornkul, Qin Zhu, Danai S. Gkotsi, Duncan R. M. Smith, Matthew L. Hillwig, Nicole Nightingale, Rebecca J. M. Goss and Xinyu Liu
Chemical Science (2010-Present) 2015 - vol. 6(Issue 12) pp:NaN6840-6840
Publication Date(Web):2015/10/06
DOI:10.1039/C5SC02919H
The hapalindole-type alkaloids naturally show striking late stage diversification of what was believed to be a conserved intermediate, cis-indolyl vinyl isonitrile (1a). Here we demonstrate enzymatically, as well as through applying a synthetic biology approach, that the pathway generating 1a (itself, a potent natural broad-spectrum antibiotic) is also dramatically flexible. We harness this to enable early stage diversification of the natural product and generation of a wide range of halo-analogues of 1a. This approach allows the preparatively useful generation of a series of antibiotics with increased lipophilicity over that of the parent antibiotic.
Co-reporter:Yao Li, Bimalendu Roy and Xinyu Liu
Chemical Communications 2011 - vol. 47(Issue 31) pp:NaN8954-8954
Publication Date(Web):2011/07/07
DOI:10.1039/C1CC13264D
A new method for selective cleavage of 2-naphthylmethyl (NAP) ether utilizing 10–20 molar excess of HF/pyridine in toluene was revealed and strategically applied to a divergent approach towards generation of a high-mannose type oligosaccharide library.
Co-reporter:Yao Li and Xinyu Liu
Chemical Communications 2014 - vol. 50(Issue 24) pp:NaN3158-3158
Publication Date(Web):2013/12/23
DOI:10.1039/C3CC49205B
A series of acid-cleavable ester-type protecting groups, with acid-sensitivity profiles parallel to those of 2-naphthylmethyl (NAP) or p-methoxybenzyl (PMB) ether, were designed and TFA in toluene was identified as a technically simple and effective deblocking cocktail for their global removal in the context of oligosaccharide synthesis.
Co-reporter:Qin Zhu and Xinyu Liu
Chemical Communications 2017 - vol. 53(Issue 19) pp:NaN2829-2829
Publication Date(Web):2017/02/15
DOI:10.1039/C7CC00782E
Heterologous expressions and purifications of all WelU proteins from the welwitindolinone pathways in Hapalosiphon welwitschii UTEX B1830 and IC-52-3 led to the discovery that WelU1 and WelU3 selectively assemble 12-epi-fischerindole U (2) and 12-epi-hapalindole C (1), respectively, from 3-geranyl 3-isocyanovinyl indolenine (4) via an enzymatic cascade featuring the Cope rearrangement, stereoselective aza-Prins cyclization and regioselective carbocation deposition. In combination with the in vitro characterization of WelU1/WelU3-homolog AmbU4 for the biogenesis of 12-epi-hapalindole U, this study provide a unified view on the origin of the early stage structural diversifications in hapalindole-type alkaloid biosynthesis, post common intermediate 4.
Co-reporter:Xinyu Liu, Matthew L. Hillwig, Leonardus M. I. Koharudin and Angela M. Gronenborn
Chemical Communications 2016 - vol. 52(Issue 8) pp:NaN1740-1740
Publication Date(Web):2015/12/22
DOI:10.1039/C5CC10060G
Biochemical characterization of aromatic prenyltransferase AmbP1 and its close homologs WelP1/FidP1 in hapalindole-type alkaloid biosynthetic pathways is reported. These enzymes mediate the magnesium-dependent selective formation of 3-geranyl 3-isocyanovinyl indolenine (2) from cis-indolyl vinyl isonitrile and geranyl pyrophosphate. The role of the magnesium cofactor in AmbP1/WelP1/FidP1 catalysis is unusual for a microbial aromatic prenyltransferase, as it not only facilitates the formation of 2 but also prevents its rearrangement to an isomeric 2-geranyl 3-isocyanovinyl indole (3). The discovery of 2 as a cryptically conserved common biosynthetic intermediate to all hapalindole-type alkaloids suggests an enzyme-mediated Cope rearrangement and aza-Prins-type cyclization cascade is required to transform 2 to a polycyclic hapalindole-like scaffold.
STEARIC ACID
L-Tryptophan, 7-fluoro-
L-Tryptophan, 4-fluoro-
1H-Indole, 3-[(2E)-3,7-dimethyl-2,6-octadienyl]-
(2S)-2-AMINO-3-PHENYLPROPANOIC ACID
7-CHLORO-L-TRYPTOPHAN
(Z)-3-(2-Isocyanoethenyl)-1H-indole
5-Chloro-L-tryptophan