Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Berin A. Boughton is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Berin A. Boughton.


Nature | 2017

The genome of Chenopodium quinoa

David Erwin Jarvis; Yung Shwen Ho; Damien J. Lightfoot; Sandra M. Schmöckel; Bo Li; T.J.A. Borm; Hajime Ohyanagi; Katsuhiko Mineta; Craig T. Michell; Noha Saber; Najeh M. Kharbatia; Ryan R. Rupper; Aaron R. Sharp; Nadine Dally; Berin A. Boughton; Yong Woo; Ge Gao; Elio Schijlen; Xiujie Guo; Afaque Ahmad Imtiyaz Momin; Sónia Negrão; Salim Al-Babili; Christoph A. Gehring; Ute Roessner; Christian Jung; Kevin G. Murphy; Stefan T. Arold; Takashi Gojobori; C. Gerard van der Linden; Eibertus N. van Loo

Chenopodium quinoa (quinoa) is a highly nutritious grain identified as an important crop to improve world food security. Unfortunately, few resources are available to facilitate its genetic improvement. Here we report the assembly of a high-quality, chromosome-scale reference genome sequence for quinoa, which was produced using single-molecule real-time sequencing in combination with optical, chromosome-contact and genetic maps. We also report the sequencing of two diploids from the ancestral gene pools of quinoa, which enables the identification of sub-genomes in quinoa, and reduced-coverage genome sequences for 22 other samples of the allotetraploid goosefoot complex. The genome sequence facilitated the identification of the transcription factor likely to control the production of anti-nutritional triterpenoid saponins found in quinoa seeds, including a mutation that appears to cause alternative splicing and a premature stop codon in sweet quinoa strains. These genomic resources are an important first step towards the genetic improvement of quinoa.


Analytical Chemistry | 2011

Comprehensive Profiling and Quantitation of Amine Group Containing Metabolites

Berin A. Boughton; Damien L. Callahan; Claudio Silva; Jairus Bowne; Amsha Nahid; Thusita Rupasinghe; Dedreja L. Tull; Malcolm J. McConville; Antony Bacic; Ute Roessner

Primary and secondary amines, including amino acids, biogenic amines, hormones, neurotransmitters, and plant siderophores, are readily derivatized with 6-aminoquinolyl-N-hydroxysuccinimidyl carbamate using easily performed experimental methodology. Complex mixtures of these amine derivatives can be fractionated and quantified using liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS). Upon collision induced dissociation (CID) in a quadrupole collision cell, all derivatized compounds lose the aminoquinoline tag. With the use of untargeted fragmentation scan functions, such as precursor ion scanning, the loss of the aminoquinoline tag (Amq) can be monitored to identify derivatized species; and the use of targeted fragmentation scans, such as multiple reaction monitoring, can be exploited to quantitate amine-containing molecules. Further, with the use of accurate mass, charge state, and retention time, identification of unknown amines is facilitated. The stability of derivatized amines was found to be variable with oxidatively labile derivatives rapidly degrading. With the inclusion of antioxidant and reducing agents, tris(2-carboxyethyl)-phosphine (TCEP) and ascorbic acid, into both extraction solvents and reaction buffers, degradation was significantly decreased, allowing reproducible identification and quantification of amine compounds in large sample sets.


Epigenetics | 2014

Postnatal stability, tissue, and time specific effects of AHRR methylation change in response to maternal smoking in pregnancy

Boris Novakovic; Joanne Ryan; Natalie Pereira; Berin A. Boughton; Jeffrey M. Craig; Richard Saffery

The intrauterine environment has the potential to “program” the developing fetus in a way that can be potentially deleterious to later health. While in utero environmental/stochastic factors are known to influence DNA methylation profile at birth, it has been difficult to assign specific examples of epigenetic variation to specific environmental exposures. Recently, several studies have linked exposure to smoking with DNA methylation change in the aryl hydrocarbon receptor repressor (AHRR) gene in blood. This includes hypomethylation of AHRR in neonatal blood in response to maternal smoking in pregnancy. The role of AHRR as a negative regulator of pathways involved in pleiotropic responses to environmental contaminants raises the possibility that smoking-induced hypomethylation is an adaptive response to an adverse in utero environmental exposure. However, the tissue specificity of the response to maternal smoking, and the stability of the methylation changes early in life remain to be determined. In this study we analyzed AHRR methylation in three cell types—cord blood mononuclear cells (CBMCs), buccal epithelium, and placenta tissue—from newborn twins of mothers who smoked throughout pregnancy and matched controls. Further, we explored the postnatal stability of this change at 18 months. Our results confirm the previous association between maternal smoking and AHRR methylation in neonatal blood. In addition, this study expands the region of AHRR methylation altered in response to maternal smoking during pregnancy and reveals the tissue-specific nature of epigenetic responses to environmental exposures in utero. Further, the evidence for postnatal stability of smoking-induced epigenetic change supports a role for epigenetics as a mediator of long-term effects of specific in utero exposures in humans. Longitudinal analysis of further specific exposures in larger cohorts is required to examine the extent of this phenomenon in humans.


Phytochemistry Reviews | 2016

Mass spectrometry imaging for plant biology: a review

Berin A. Boughton; Dinaiz Thinagaran; Daniel Sarabia; Antony Bacic; Ute Roessner

Mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) is a developing technique to measure the spatio-temporal distribution of many biomolecules in tissues. Over the preceding decade, MSI has been adopted by plant biologists and applied in a broad range of areas, including primary metabolism, natural products, plant defense, plant responses to abiotic and biotic stress, plant lipids and the developing field of spatial metabolomics. This review covers recent advances in plant-based MSI, general aspects of instrumentation, analytical approaches, sample preparation and the current trends in respective plant research.


New Phytologist | 2013

The response of the maize nitrate transport system to nitrogen demand and supply across the lifecycle

Trevor Garnett; Vanessa Conn; Darren Plett; Simon J. Conn; Juergen Zanghellini; Nenah Mackenzie; Akiko Enju; Karen Francis; Luke Holtham; Ute Roessner; Berin A. Boughton; Antony Bacic; Neil J. Shirley; Antoni Rafalski; Kanwarpal S. Dhugga; Mark Tester; Brent N. Kaiser

An understanding of nitrate (NO3-) uptake throughout the lifecycle of plants, and how this process responds to nitrogen (N) availability, is an important step towards the development of plants with improved nitrogen use efficiency (NUE). NO3- uptake capacity and transcript levels of putative high- and low-affinity NO3- transporters (NRTs) were profiled across the lifecycle of dwarf maize (Zea mays) plants grown at reduced and adequate NO3-. Plants showed major changes in high-affinity NO3- uptake capacity across the lifecycle, which varied with changing relative growth rates of roots and shoots. Transcript abundances of putative high-affinity NRTs (predominantly ZmNRT2.1 and ZmNRT2.2) were correlated with two distinct peaks in high-affinity root NO3- uptake capacity and also N availability. The reduction in NO3- supply during the lifecycle led to a dramatic increase in NO3- uptake capacity, which preceded changes in transcript levels of NRTs, suggesting a model with short-term post-translational regulation and longer term transcriptional regulation of NO3- uptake capacity. These observations offer new insight into the control of NO3- uptake by both plant developmental processes and N availability, and identify key control points that may be targeted by future plant improvement programmes to enhance N uptake relative to availability and/or demand.


Metabolites | 2016

Current and Future Perspectives on the Structural Identification of Small Molecules in Biological Systems

Daniel A. Dias; Oliver A. H. Jones; David J. Beale; Berin A. Boughton; Devin Benheim; Konstantinos A. Kouremenos; Jean-Luc Wolfender; David Wishart

Although significant advances have been made in recent years, the structural elucidation of small molecules continues to remain a challenging issue for metabolite profiling. Many metabolomic studies feature unknown compounds; sometimes even in the list of features identified as “statistically significant” in the study. Such metabolic “dark matter” means that much of the potential information collected by metabolomics studies is lost. Accurate structure elucidation allows researchers to identify these compounds. This in turn, facilitates downstream metabolite pathway analysis, and a better understanding of the underlying biology of the system under investigation. This review covers a range of methods for the structural elucidation of individual compounds, including those based on gas and liquid chromatography hyphenated to mass spectrometry, single and multi-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and high-resolution mass spectrometry and includes discussion of data standardization. Future perspectives in structure elucidation are also discussed; with a focus on the potential development of instruments and techniques, in both nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and mass spectrometry that, may help solve some of the current issues that are hampering the complete identification of metabolite structure and function.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Irreversible inhibition of dihydrodipicolinate synthase by 4-oxo-heptenedioic acid analogues

Berin A. Boughton; Michael D. W. Griffin; Paul A. O’Donnell; R.J. Dobson; Matthew A. Perugini; Juliet A. Gerrard; Craig A. Hutton

We report the synthesis of (2E,5E)-4-oxoheptadienedioic acid and (2E)-4-oxoheptenedioic acid and evaluation of both diester and diacid analogues as inhibitors of bacterial dihydrodipicolinate synthase. Enzyme kinetic studies allowed the determination of second-order rate constants of inactivation; and substrate co-incubation studies have shown the inhibitors act at the active-site. Mass spectrometric analyses have further explored the enzyme-inhibitor interaction and determined the sites of enzyme alkylation.


Plant Physiology | 2010

The Mechanism of Boron Mobility in Wheat and Canola Phloem

James Stangoulis; Max Tate; Robin D. Graham; Martin Bucknall; Lachlan Palmer; Berin A. Boughton; Robert J. Reid

Low-molecular-weight borate complexes were isolated from canola (Brassica napus) and wheat (Triticum aestivum) phloem exudates, as well as the cytoplasm of the fresh-water alga Chara corallina, and identified using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Phloem exudate was collected from field-grown canola inflorescence stalks by shallow incision, while wheat phloem exudate was collected by aphid stylectomy. Chara cytoplasm was collected by careful manual separation of the cell wall, vacuole, and cytosolic compartments. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry showed the presence of isotopic borate complexes, at mass-to-charge ratio of 690.22/691.22 in the canola and wheat phloem and at 300.11/301.11 in canola phloem and Chara cytoplasm. Using reference compounds, the borate complexes with mass-to-charge ratio 690.22/691.22 was identified as a bis-sucrose (Suc) borate complex in which the 4,6-hydroxyl pairs from the two α-glucopyranoside moieties formed an [L2B]−1 complex. Further investigation using liquid chromatography electrospray ionization triple quadrupole mass spectrometry analysis confirmed the presence of the bis-Suc borate complex in wheat phloem with a concentration up to 220 μm. The 300.11/301.11 complex was putatively identified as a bis-N-acetyl-serine borate complex but its concentration was below the detection limits of the liquid chromatography electrospray ionization triple quadrupole mass spectrometer so could not be quantified. The presence of borate complexes in the phloem provides a mechanistic explanation for the observed phloem boron mobility in canola and wheat and other species that transport Suc as their primary photoassimilate.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

1,3-Phenylene bis(ketoacid) derivatives as inhibitors of Escherichia coli dihydrodipicolinate synthase.

Berin A. Boughton; Lilian Hor; Juliet A. Gerrard; Craig A. Hutton

Dihydrodipicolinate synthase is a key enzyme in the lysine biosynthesis pathway that catalyzes the condensation of pyruvate and aspartate semi-aldehyde. A series of phenolic ketoacid derivatives that mimic the proposed enzymatic intermediate were designed as potential inhibitors of this enzyme and were synthesized from simple precursors. The ketoacid derivatives were shown to act as slow and slow-tight binding inhibitors. Mass spectrometric experiments provided further evidence to support the proposed model of inhibition, demonstrating either an encounter complex or a condensation product for the slow and slow-tight binding inhibitors, respectively.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2014

Degradation of Curcuminoids by in Vitro Pure Culture Fermentation

Suryani Tan; Thusitha Rupasinghe; Dedreia Tull; Berin A. Boughton; Christine M. Oliver; Chris McSweeny; Sally L. Gras; Mary Ann Augustin

Colonic bacteria may mediate the transformation of curcuminoids, but studies of this metabolism are limited. Here, the metabolism of curcuminoids by Escherichia fergusonii (ATCC 35469) and two Escherichia coli strains (ATCC 8739 and DH10B) was examined in modified medium for colon bacteria (mMCB) with or without pig cecal fluid. LC-MS analysis showed that 16-37% of curcumin, 6-16% of demethoxycurcumin (DMC) and 7-15% of bis-demethoxycurcumin (Bis-DMC), and 7-15% of bis-demethoxycurcumin (Bis-DMC) were converted following 36 h of fermentation, with the amount of curcuminoids degraded varying depending on the bacterial strain and medium used. Three metabolites (dihydrocurcumin (DHC), tetrahydrocurcumin (THC), and ferulic acid (FA)) were found in fermentation cultures with all strains used. In addition, a compound with m/z [M - H](-) 470 was found and identified to be a curcumin adduct (curcumin-l-cysteine), using accurate mass FT-ICR-MS. This study provides insights into the bacterial metabolism of curcuminoids.

Collaboration


Dive into the Berin A. Boughton's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ute Roessner

University of Melbourne

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antony Bacic

University of Melbourne

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brett Hamilton

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge