Richard Baxter

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Name: Baxter, Richard
Organization: Yale University , USA
Department: Department of Chemistry, Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, and Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology
Title: (PhD)

TOPICS

Co-reporter:Kathryn Krueger;Alicia Contet;Richard H. G. Baxter
Biochemistry February 21, 2017 Volume 56(Issue 7) pp:907-918
Publication Date(Web):January 10, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.biochem.6b00870
Arthropods, especially ticks and mosquitoes, are the vectors for a number of parasitic and viral human diseases, including malaria, sleeping sickness, Dengue, and Zika, yet arthropods show tremendous individual variation in their capacity to transmit disease. A key factor in this capacity is the group of genetically encoded immune factors that counteract infection by the pathogen. Arthropod-specific pattern recognition receptors and protease cascades detect and respond to infection. Proteins such as antimicrobial peptides, thioester-containing proteins, and transglutaminases effect responses such as lysis, phagocytosis, melanization, and agglutination. Effector responses are initiated by damage signals such as reactive oxygen species signaling from epithelial cells and recognized by cell surface receptors on hemocytes. Antiviral immunity is primarily mediated by siRNA pathways but coupled with interferon-like signaling, antimicrobial peptides, and thioester-containing proteins. Molecular mechanisms of immunity are closely linked to related traits of longevity and fertility, and arthropods have the capacity for innate immunological memory. Advances in understanding vector immunity can be leveraged to develop novel control strategies for reducing the rate of transmission of both ancient and emerging threats to global health.
Co-reporter:Marni Williams
Biophysical Reviews 2014 Volume 6( Issue 3-4) pp:261-272
Publication Date(Web):2014 December
DOI:10.1007/s12551-014-0142-6
Thioester-containing proteins (TEPs) form an ancient and diverse family of secreted proteins that play central roles in the innate immune response. Two families of TEPs, complement factors and α2-macroglobulins, have been known and studied in vertebrates for many years, but only in the last decade have crystal structures become available. In the same period, the presence of two additional classes of TEPs has been revealed in arthropods. In this review, we discuss the common structural features TEPs and how this knowledge can be applied to the many arthropod TEPs of unknown function. TEPs perform a wide variety of functions that are driven by different quaternary structures and protein–protein interactions between a common set of folded domains. A common theme is regulated conformational change triggered by proteolysis. Structure-function analysis of the diverse arthropod TEPs may identify not just new mechanisms in innate immunity but also interfaces between immunity, development and cell death.
Co-reporter:Michael S. Melicher, John Chu, Allison S. Walker, Scott J. Miller, Richard H. G. Baxter, and Alanna Schepartz
Organic Letters 2013 Volume 15(Issue 19) pp:5048-5051
Publication Date(Web):September 13, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ol402381n
Despite significant progress in the design of receptors and sensors for simple polyols and monosaccharides, few synthetic receptors discriminate among multiple saccharide units simultaneously, especially under physiological conditions. Described here is the three-dimensional structure of a supramolecular complex—a β-peptide bundle—designed for the potential to interact simultaneously with as many as eight discrete monosaccharide units. The preliminary evaluation of this construct as a vehicle for polyol binding is also presented.
Co-reporter:Philip G. McQueen
Biophysical Reviews 2010 Volume 2( Issue 3) pp:111-120
Publication Date(Web):2010 August
DOI:10.1007/s12551-010-0034-3
Building a mathematical model of population dynamics of pathogens within their host involves considerations of factors similar to those in ecology, as pathogens can prey on cells in the host. But within the multicellular host, attacked cell types are integrated with other cellular systems, which in turn intervene in the infection. For example, immune responses attempt to sense and then eliminate or contain pathogens, and homeostatic mechanisms try to compensate for cell loss. This review focuses on modeling applied to malarias, diseases caused by single-cell eukaryote parasites that infect red blood cells, with special concern given to vivax malaria, a disease often thought to be benign (if sometimes incapacitating) because the parasite only attacks a small proportion of red blood cells, the very youngest ones. However, I will use mathematical modeling to argue that depletion of this pool of red blood cells can be disastrous to the host if growth of the parasite is not vigorously check by host immune responses. Also, modeling can elucidate aspects of new field observations that indicate that vivax malaria is more dangerous than previously thought.
aziridine
QUINOLINE, 8-CHLORO-2-ETHYNYL-
2-Methyl-4-(quinolin-2-yl)but-3-yn-2-ol
Isoxazole,3-bromo-4,5-dihydro-
5-Bromo-2-(2-methoxyethoxy)pyridine
4-Iodo-2-methoxyphenol
Ethanol, 2-[2-[(triphenylmethyl)amino]ethoxy]-
4-(3-Bromopropyl)morpholine
2H-Pyran, tetrahydro-2-(4-iodophenoxy)-