The continuous flow synthesis of active pharmaceutical ingredients, value-added chemicals, and materials has grown tremendously over the past ten years. This revolution in chemical manufacturing has resulted from innovations in both new methodology and technology. This field, however, has been predominantly focused on synthetic organic chemistry, and the use of biocatalysts in continuous flow systems is only now becoming popular. Although immobilized enzymes and whole cells in batch systems are common, their continuous flow counterparts have grown rapidly over the past two years. With continuous flow systems offering improved mixing, mass transfer, thermal control, pressurized processing, decreased variation, automation, process analytical technology, and in-line purification, the combination of biocatalysis and flow chemistry opens powerful new process windows. This Review explores continuous flow biocatalysts with emphasis on new technology, enzymes, whole cells, co-factor recycling, and immobilization methods for the synthesis of pharmaceuticals, value-added chemicals, and materials.
Seven different, but highly conserved 14-3-3 proteins are involved in diverse signaling pathways in human cells. It is unclear how the 14-
DJ-1, a 20.7 kDa protein, is overexpressed in people who have bladder cancer (BC). Its elevated concentration in urine allows it to serve as a marker for BC. However, no biosensor for the detection of DJ-1 has been demonstrated. Here, we describe a virus bioresistor (VBR) capable of detecting DJ-1 in urine at a concentration of 10 pM in 1 min. The VBR consists of a pair of millimeter-scale gold electrodes that measure the electrical impedance of an ultrathin (≈ 150–200 nm), two-layer polymeric channel. The top layer of this channel (90–105 nm in thickness) consists of an electrodeposited virus-PEDOT (PEDOT is poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene)) composite containing embedded M13 virus particles that are engineered to recognize and bind to the target protein of interest, DJ-1. The bottom layer consists of spin-coated PEDOT–PSS (poly(styrenesulfonate)). Together, these two layers constitute a current divider. We demonstrate here that reducing the thickness of the bottom PEDOT–PSS layer increases its resistance and concentrates the resistance drop of the channel in the top virus-PEDOT layer, thereby increasing the sensitivity of the VBR and enabling the detection of DJ-1. Large signal amplitudes coupled with the inherent simplicity of the VBR sensor design result in high signal-to-noise (S/N > 100) and excellent sensor-to-sensor reproducibility characterized by coefficients of variation in the range of 3–7% across the DJ-1 binding curve down to a concentration of 30 pM, near the 10 pM limit of detection (LOD), encompassing four orders of magnitude in concentration.
We present an NMR-based antagonist induced dissociation assay (AIDA) for validation of inhibitor action on protein-protein interactions. As opposed to many standard NMR methods, AIDA directly validates the inhibitor potency in an in vitro NMR competition binding experiment. AIDA requires a large protein fragment (larger than 30 kDa) to bind to a small reporter protein (less than 20 kDa). We show here that a small fragment of a protein fused to glutathione S-transferase (GST) can effectively substitute the large protein component. We successfully used a GST-tagged N-terminal 73-residue p53 domain for binding studies with the human MDM2 protein. Other interactions we studied involved complexes of CDK2, cyclin A, p27, and the retinoblastoma protein. All these proteins play a key role in the cell division cycle, are associated with tumorigenesis, and are thus the subject of anticancer therapy strategies.
Amino groups are one of the various types of hydrogen bond donors, abundantly found in protein main chains, protein side chains, and DNA bases. The polar hydrogen atoms of these groups exhibit short ranged, specific, and directional hydrogen bonds, which play a decisive role in the specificity and stability of protein-DNA complexes. To date, planar amino groups are only considered for the analysis of protein-DNA interfacial hydrogen bonds. This assumption regarding hydrogen atom positions possibly failed to establish the expected role of hydrogen bonds in protein-DNA recognition. We have performed ab initio quantum chemical studies on amino acid side chains and DNA bases containing amino groups as well as on specific hydrogen bonded residue pairs selected from high-resolution protein-DNA complex crystal structures. Our results suggest that occurrences of pyramidal amino groups are more probable in comparison with the usually adopted planar geometry. This increases the quality of the existing hydrogen bonds in almost all cases. Further, detailed analysis of protein-DNA interfacial hydrogen bonds in 107 crystal structures using the in-house program "pyrHBfind" indicates that consideration of energetically more preferred nonplanar amino groups improves the geometry of hydrogen bonds and also gives rise to new contacts amounting to nearly 14.5% of the existing interactions. Large improvements have been observed specifically for the amino groups of guanine, which faces the DNA minor groove and thus helps to resolve the problem of insufficient directional contacts observed in many minor groove binding complexes. Apart from guanine, improvement observed for asparagine, glutamine, adenine, or cytosine also indicates that the consideration of nonplanar amino groups leads to a more realistic scenario of hydrogen bonds occurring between protein and DNA residues.
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