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Dive into the research topics where Anthony P. Green is active.

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Featured researches published by Anthony P. Green.


Nature Chemistry | 2014

Discrimination of epimeric glycans and glycopeptides using IM-MS and its potential for carbohydrate sequencing

Peter Both; Anthony P. Green; Christopher J. Gray; Robert Šardzík; Josef Voglmeir; Carolina Fontana; Martina Austeri; Martin Rejzek; David E. Richardson; Robert A. Field; Göran Widmalm; Sabine L. Flitsch; Claire E. Eyers

Mass spectrometry is the primary analytical technique used to characterize the complex oligosaccharides that decorate cell surfaces. Monosaccharide building blocks are often simple epimers, which when combined produce diastereomeric glycoconjugates indistinguishable by mass spectrometry. Structure elucidation frequently relies on assumptions that biosynthetic pathways are highly conserved. Here, we show that biosynthetic enzymes can display unexpected promiscuity, with human glycosyltransferase pp-α-GanT2 able to utilize both uridine diphosphate N-acetylglucosamine and uridine diphosphate N-acetylgalactosamine, leading to the synthesis of epimeric glycopeptides in vitro. Ion-mobility mass spectrometry (IM-MS) was used to separate these structures and, significantly, enabled characterization of the attached glycan based on the drift times of the monosaccharide product ions generated following collision-induced dissociation. Finally, ion-mobility mass spectrometry following fragmentation was used to determine the nature of both the reducing and non-reducing glycans of a series of epimeric disaccharides and the branched pentasaccharide Man3 glycan, demonstrating that this technique may prove useful for the sequencing of complex oligosaccharides. Identification of glycosylation patterns is complicated by the lack of sensitive analytical techniques that can distinguish between epimeric carbohydrates. It has now been shown that ion-mobility tandem mass spectrometry of ions derived from glycopeptides and oligosaccharides enables glycan stereochemistry to be determined, highlighting the potential of this technique for sequencing complex carbohydrates on cell surfaces.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Chiral Amine Synthesis Using ω‐Transaminases: An Amine Donor that Displaces Equilibria and Enables High‐Throughput Screening

Anthony P. Green; Nicholas J. Turner; Elaine O'Reilly

The widespread application of ω-transaminases as biocatalysts for chiral amine synthesis has been hampered by fundamental challenges, including unfavorable equilibrium positions and product inhibition. Herein, an efficient process that allows reactions to proceed in high conversion in the absence of by-product removal using only one equivalent of a diamine donor (ortho-xylylenediamine) is reported. This operationally simple method is compatible with the most widely used (R)- and (S)-selective ω-TAs and is particularly suitable for the conversion of substrates with unfavorable equilibrium positions (e.g., 1-indanone). Significantly, spontaneous polymerization of the isoindole by-product generates colored derivatives, providing a high-throughput screening platform to identify desired ω-TA activity.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

A New Generation of Smart Amine Donors for Transaminase-Mediated Biotransformations.

Andrew Gomm; William Lewis; Anthony P. Green; Elaine O'Reilly

The application of ω-transaminase biocatalysts for the synthesis of optically pure chiral amines presents a number of challenges, including difficulties associated with displacing the challenging reaction equilibria. Herein, we report a highly effective approach using low equivalents of the new diamine donor, cadaverine, which enables high conversions of challenging substrates to the corresponding chiral amines in excellent ee. This approach paves the way for the design of self-sufficient fermentation processes combining transaminase biotransformations with existing strategies for cadaverine production by decarboxylation of endogenous lysine.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

A Chemically Programmed Proximal Ligand Enhances the Catalytic Properties of a Heme Enzyme

Anthony P. Green; Takahiro Hayashi; Peer R. E. Mittl; Donald Hilvert

Enzymes rely on complex interactions between precisely positioned active site residues as a mechanism to compensate for the limited functionality contained within the genetic code. Heme enzymes provide a striking example of this complexity, whereby the electronic properties of reactive ferryl intermediates are finely tuned through hydrogen bonding interactions between proximal ligands and neighboring amino acids. Here, we show that introduction of a chemically programmed proximal Nδ-methyl histidine (NMH) ligand into an engineered ascorbate peroxidase (APX2) overcomes the reliance on the conserved Asp-His hydrogen bonding interaction, leading to a catalytically modified enzyme (APX2 NMH), which is able to achieve a significantly higher number of turnovers compared with APX2 without compromising catalytic efficiency. Structural, spectroscopic and kinetic characterization of APX2 NMH and several active site variants provides valuable insights into the role of the Asp-His-Fe triad of heme peroxidases. More significantly, simplification of catalytic mechanisms through the incorporation of chemically optimized ligands may facilitate efforts to create and evolve new active site heme environments within proteins.


Phytochemistry Reviews | 2010

Approaches to the total synthesis of biologically active natural products: studies directed towards bryostatins

Anthony P. Green; Simon Hardy; Alan T. L. Lee; Eric J. Thomas

Progress on a total synthesis of the marine natural products, the bryostatins, is reviewed. Following studies aimed at the synthesis of the 1,16- and 17,27-fragments, procedures for the assembly of the macrocyclic ring of the bryostatins were investigated. Although ring-closing metathesis was not found to be useful for the synthesis of bryostatins with geminal dimethyl groups at C18, the modified Julia reaction was found to be useful for the stereoselective formation of the 16,17-double-bond and led to a synthesis of an advanced macrocyclic intermediate. Several novel synthetic procedures feature in this work.


Archive | 2018

A NoncanonicalProximal Heme Ligand Affords an EfficientPeroxidase in a Globin Fold

Moritz Pott; Takahiro Hayashi; Takahiro Mori; Peer R. E. Mittl; Anthony P. Green; Donald Hilvert

Expanding the range of genetically encoded metal coordination environments accessible within tunable protein scaffolds presents excellent opportunities for the creation of metalloenzymes with augmented properties and novel activities. Here, we demonstrate that installation of a noncanonical Nδ-methyl histidine (NMH) as the proximal heme ligand in the oxygen binding protein myoglobin (Mb) leads to substantial increases in heme redox potential and promiscuous peroxidase activity. Structural characterization of this catalytically modified myoglobin variant (Mb NMH) revealed significant changes in the proximal pocket, including alterations to hydrogen-bonding interactions involving the prosthetic porphyrin cofactor. Further optimization of Mb NMH via a combination of rational modification and several rounds of laboratory evolution afforded efficient peroxidase biocatalysts within a globin fold, with activities comparable to those displayed by natures peroxidases.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Engineering an Enantioselective Amine Oxidase for the Synthesis of Pharmaceutical Building Blocks and Alkaloid Natural Products

Diego Ghislieri; Anthony P. Green; Marta Pontini; Simon C. Willies; Ian Rowles; Annika Frank; Gideon Grogan; Nicholas J. Turner


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Chemoenzymatic Synthesis of O-Mannosylpeptides in Solution and on Solid Phase

Robert Šardzík; Anthony P. Green; Nicolas Laurent; Peter Both; Carolina Fontana; Josef Voglmeir; Martin J. Weissenborn; Rose Haddoub; Stuart M. Haslam; Göran Widmalm; Sabine L. Flitsch


ACS Catalysis | 2013

Monoamine Oxidase (MAO-N) Catalyzed Deracemization of Tetrahydro-β-carbolines: Substrate Dependent Switch in Enantioselectivity

Diego Ghislieri; Deborah Houghton; Anthony P. Green; Simon C. Willies; Nicholas J. Turner


Catalysis Science & Technology | 2014

Role of laccase as an enzymatic pretreatment method to improve lignocellulosic saccharification

Lucy Heap; Anthony P. Green; David M. Brown; Bart E. van Dongen; Nicholas J. Turner

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Eric J. Thomas

University of Manchester

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Simon Hardy

University of Manchester

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Alan T. L. Lee

University of Manchester

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Peter Both

University of Manchester

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