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Dive into the research topics where Albert A. Bowers is active.

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Featured researches published by Albert A. Bowers.


Natural Product Reports | 2013

Ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptide natural products: overview and recommendations for a universal nomenclature

Paul G. Arnison; Mervyn J. Bibb; Gabriele Bierbaum; Albert A. Bowers; Tim S. Bugni; Grzegorz Bulaj; Julio A. Camarero; Dominic J. Campopiano; Gregory L. Challis; Jon Clardy; Paul D. Cotter; David J. Craik; Michael J. Dawson; Elke Dittmann; Stefano Donadio; Pieter C. Dorrestein; Karl Dieter Entian; Michael A. Fischbach; John S. Garavelli; Ulf Göransson; Christian W. Gruber; Daniel H. Haft; Thomas K. Hemscheidt; Christian Hertweck; Colin Hill; Alexander R. Horswill; Marcel Jaspars; Wendy L. Kelly; Judith P. Klinman; Oscar P. Kuipers

This review presents recommended nomenclature for the biosynthesis of ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs), a rapidly growing class of natural products. The current knowledge regarding the biosynthesis of the >20 distinct compound classes is also reviewed, and commonalities are discussed.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Total synthesis and biological mode of action of largazole: A potent class I histone deacetylase inhibitor

Albert A. Bowers; Nathan West; Jack Taunton; Stuart L. Schreiber; James E. Bradner; Robert M. Williams

The efficient total synthesis of the recently described natural substance largazole (1) and its active metabolite largazole thiol (2) is described. The synthesis required eight linear steps and proceeded in 37% overall yield. It is demonstrated that largazole is a pro-drug that is activated by removal of the octanoyl residue from the 3-hydroxy-7-mercaptohept-4-enoic acid moiety to generate the active metabolite 2, which is an extraordinarily potent Class I histone deacetylase inhibitor. Synthetic largazole and 2 have been evaluated side-by-side with FK228 and SAHA for inhibition of HDACs 1, 2, 3, and 6. Largazole and largazole thiol were further assayed for cytotoxic activity against a panel of chemoresistant melanoma cell lines, and it was found that largazole is substantially more cytotoxic than largazole thiol; this difference is attributed to differences in the cell permeability of the two substances.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Synthesis and Conformation-Activity Relationships of the Peptide Isosteres of FK228 and Largazole

Albert A. Bowers; Thomas J. Greshock; Nathan West; Guillermina Estiu; Stuart L. Schreiber; Olaf Wiest; Robert M. Williams; James E. Bradner

The peptide isosteres (10 and 11) of the naturally occurring and potent histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors FK228 and largazole have been synthesized and evaluated side-by-side with FK228, largazole, and SAHA for inhibition of the class I HDACs 1, 2, 3, and 6.


Organic Letters | 2009

Synthesis and Histone Deacetylase Inhibitory Activity of Largazole Analogs: Alteration of the Zinc-Binding Domain and Macrocyclic Scaffold

Albert A. Bowers; Nathan West; Tenaya Newkirk; Annie E. Troutman-Youngman; Stuart L. Schreiber; Olaf Wiest; James E. Bradner; Robert M. Williams

Fourteen analogs of the marine natural product largazole have been prepared and assayed against histone deacetylases (HDACs) 1, 2, 3, and 6. Olefin cross-metathesis was used to efficiently access six variants of the side-chain zinc-binding domain, while adaptation of our previously reported modular synthesis allowed probing of the macrocyclic cap group.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Manipulation of Thiocillin Variants by Prepeptide Gene Replacement: Structure, Conformation, and Activity of Heterocycle Substitution Mutants

Albert A. Bowers; Michael G. Acker; Alexander Koglin; Christopher T. Walsh

Bacillus cereus ATCC 14579 converts the C-terminal 14 residues of a 52-mer prepeptide into a related set of eight variants of the thiocillin subclass of thiazolyl peptide antibiotics by a cascade of post-translational modifications that alter 13 of those 14 residues. We have introduced prepeptide gene variants into a knockout strain to conduct an alanine scan of all 14 progenitor residues, as well as a serine scan of the six cysteine residues that are converted to thiazoles in the mature natural product. No mature scaffolds were detected for the S1A and S10A mutants, consistent with their roles as the source of the pyridine core. In both the alanine and serine scans, only one substitution mutant failed to produce a mature scaffold: cysteine 11. Cysteine to serine mutants gave mixture of dehydrations, aromatizations, and unaltered alcohol side chains depending on position. Overall, substitutions that altered the trithiazolylpyridine core or reduced the conformational rigidity of the 26-membered macrocyclic loop led to loss of antibiotic activity. In total, 21 peptide mutants were cultured, from which production of 107 compounds was observed and 94 compounds, representing 17 structural mutants, were assayed for antibiotic activity. High-resolution NMR solution structures were determined for one mutant and one wild-type compound. These structures demonstrate that the tight conformational rigidity of the natural product is severely disrupted by loss of even a single heterocycle, perhaps accounting for the attendant loss of activity in such mutants.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Thiazolyl Peptide Antibiotic Biosynthesis: A Cascade of Post-translational Modifications on Ribosomal Nascent Proteins

Christopher T. Walsh; Michael G. Acker; Albert A. Bowers

Antibiotics of the thiocillin, GE2270A, and thiostrepton class, which block steps in bacterial protein synthesis, contain a trithiazolyl (tetrahydro)pyridine core that provides the architectural constraints for high affinity binding to either the 50 S ribosomal subunit or elongation factor Tu. These mature antibiotic scaffolds arise from a cascade of post-translational modifications on 50–60-residue prepeptide precursors that trim away the N-terminal leader sequences (∼40 residues) while the C-terminal 14–18 residues are converted into the mature scaffold. In the producing microbes, the genes encoding the prepeptide open reading frames are flanked in biosynthetic clusters by genes encoding post-translational modification enzymes that carry out lantibiotic-type dehydrations of Ser and Thr residues to dehydroamino acid side chains, cyclodehydration and oxidation of cysteines to thiazoles, and condensation of two dehydroalanine residues en route to the (tetrahydro)pyridine core. The trithiazolyl pyridine framework thus arises from post-translational modification of the peptide backbone of three Cys and two Ser residues of the prepeptide.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Generation of thiocillin variants by prepeptide gene replacement and in vivo processing by Bacillus cereus

Michael G. Acker; Albert A. Bowers; Christopher T. Walsh

The thiocillins are natural-product antibiotics derived from ribosomally encoded peptides that undergo extensive posttranslational modifications to yield the mature trithiazolylpyridine-containing macrocyclic compound. Poor pharmacokinetic properties have prevented the clinical use of these highly potent antibiotics. Through in vivo manipulation of the gene responsible for production of the thiocillin precursor peptide, we have generated 65 novel thiocillin variants, allowing us to explore structure-activity relationships involved in both precursor peptide maturation and antibiotic activity.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Chemoenzymatic Synthesis of Thiazolyl Peptide Natural Products Featuring an Enzyme-Catalyzed Formal [4 + 2] Cycloaddition

Walter J. Wever; Jonathan W. Bogart; Joshua A. Baccile; Andrew N. Chan; Frank C. Schroeder; Albert A. Bowers

Thiocillins from Bacillus cereus ATCC 14579 are members of the well-known thiazolyl peptide class of natural product antibiotics, the biosynthesis of which has recently been shown to proceed via post-translational modification of ribosomally encoded precursor peptides. It has long been hypothesized that the final step of thiazolyl peptide biosynthesis involves a formal [4 + 2] cycloaddition between two dehydroalanines, a unique transformation that had eluded enzymatic characterization. Here we demonstrate that TclM, a single enzyme from the thiocillin biosynthetic pathway, catalyzes this transformation. To facilitate characterization of this new class of enzyme, we have developed a combined chemical and biological route to the complex peptide substrate, relying on chemical synthesis of a modified C-terminal fragment and coupling to a 38-residue leader peptide by means of native chemical ligation (NCL). This strategy, combined with active enzyme, provides a new chemoenzymatic route to this promising class of antibiotics.


Natural Product Reports | 2009

Discovery, biological activity, synthesis and potential therapeutic utility of naturally occurring histone deacetylase inhibitors

Tenaya Newkirk; Albert A. Bowers; Robert M. Williams

Covering: up to 2009 A number of small-molecule natural products have been shown to inhibit the activity of histone deacetylases (HDACs). These enzymes catalyze the hydrolysis of N-acetyl lysine residues of the histone proteins that package chromosomal DNA and thereby play a vital role in mediating gene expression. HDAC inhibitors (HDACi) are potent cytotoxic agents with significant potential as anticancer therapeutics and it is currently thought that their selective activity on members of specific subclasses of the eighteen known human HDAC isoforms is important to this activity and to moderation of their toxicity. Herein, we discuss both linear and cyclic HDACi, as well as selected synthetically derived analogs.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Thiopeptide antibiotics stimulate biofilm formation in Bacillus subtilis

Rachel M. Bleich; Jeramie D. Watrous; Pieter C. Dorrestein; Albert A. Bowers; Elizabeth A. Shank

Significance Thiazolyl peptides are known antibiotics produced by diverse bacterial taxa. It has been believed that antibiotics are deployed by bacteria as weapons, providing them with an evolutionary advantage over other microbes. We show here that these weapons can also act as chemical tools that elicit biofilm production in the model bacterium Bacillus subtilis. Importantly, the biofilm-inducing (and therefore signaling) properties of these compounds are independent of their killing activity. We go on to use this biofilm-inducing activity to identify and confirm the presence of thiazolyl peptide gene clusters in other bacteria. These results indicate that thiazolyl peptides, and potentially other antibiotics, have the ability to alter bacterial behavior in ways important both to the environment and to human health. Bacteria have evolved the ability to produce a wide range of structurally complex natural products historically called “secondary” metabolites. Although some of these compounds have been identified as bacterial communication cues, more frequently natural products are scrutinized for antibiotic activities that are relevant to human health. However, there has been little regard for how these compounds might otherwise impact the physiology of neighboring microbes present in complex communities. Bacillus cereus secretes molecules that activate expression of biofilm genes in Bacillus subtilis. Here, we use imaging mass spectrometry to identify the thiocillins, a group of thiazolyl peptide antibiotics, as biofilm matrix-inducing compounds produced by B. cereus. We found that thiocillin increased the population of matrix-producing B. subtilis cells and that this activity could be abolished by multiple structural alterations. Importantly, a mutation that eliminated thiocillin’s antibiotic activity did not affect its ability to induce biofilm gene expression in B. subtilis. We go on to show that biofilm induction appears to be a general phenomenon of multiple structurally diverse thiazolyl peptides and use this activity to confirm the presence of thiazolyl peptide gene clusters in other bacterial species. Our results indicate that the roles of secondary metabolites initially identified as antibiotics may have more complex effects—acting not only as killing agents, but also as specific modulators of microbial cellular phenotypes.

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David Crich

Wayne State University

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Walter J. Wever

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Pierre Crabbé

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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