Casey J. Krusemark
University of Wisconsin-Madison
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Featured researches published by Casey J. Krusemark.
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2009
Casey J. Krusemark; Brian L. Frey; Peter J. Belshaw; Lloyd M. Smith
Electrospray ionization (ESI) of denatured proteins produces a broad distribution of multiply-charged ions leading to multiple peaks in the mass spectrum. We investigated changes in the positive-mode ESI charge state distribution produced by several chemical modifications of denatured proteins. Capping carboxylic acid groups with neutral functional groups yields little change in charge state distribution compared with unmodified proteins. The results indicate that carboxyl groups do not play a significant role in the positive charging of denatured proteins in ESI. The modification of proteins with additional basic sites or fixed positive charges generates substantially higher charge states, providing evidence that the number of ionizable sites, rather than molecular size and shape, determines ESI charging for denatured proteins. Fixed charge modification also significantly reduces the number of protons acquired by a protein, in that the charge state envelope is not increased by the full number of fixed charges appended. This result demonstrates that Coulombic repulsion between positive charges plays a significant role in determining charge state distribution by affecting the gas-phase basicity of ionizable sites. Addition of fixed-charge moieties to a protein is a useful approach for shifting protein charge state distributions to higher charge states, and with further work, it may help limit the distribution of protein ions to fewer charge states.
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2007
Casey J. Krusemark; Peter J. Belshaw
An engineered, orthogonal ligand receptor pair has been exploited as a method to covalently label fusion proteins with small molecule probes in live cells.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Casey J. Krusemark; Nicolas P. Tilmans; Patrick O. Brown; Pehr B. Harbury
The first demonstration that macromolecules could be evolved in a test tube was reported twenty-five years ago. That breakthrough meant that billions of years of chance discovery and refinement could be compressed into a few weeks, and provided a powerful tool that now dominates all aspects of protein engineering. A challenge has been to extend this scientific advance into synthetic chemical space: to enable the directed evolution of abiotic molecules. The problem has been tackled in many ways. These include expanding the natural genetic code to include unnatural amino acids, engineering polyketide and polypeptide synthases to produce novel products, and tagging combinatorial chemistry libraries with DNA. Importantly, there is still no small-molecule analog of directed protein evolution, i.e. a substantiated approach for optimizing complex (≥ 10^9 diversity) populations of synthetic small molecules over successive generations. We present a key advance towards this goal: a tool for genetically-programmed synthesis of small-molecule libraries from large chemical alphabets. The approach accommodates alphabets that are one to two orders of magnitude larger than any in Nature, and facilitates evolution within the chemical spaces they create. This is critical for small molecules, which are built up from numerous and highly varied chemical fragments. We report a proof-of-concept chemical evolution experiment utilizing an outsized genetic code, and demonstrate that fitness traits can be passed from an initial small-molecule population through to the great-grandchildren of that population. The results establish the practical feasibility of engineering synthetic small molecules through accelerated evolution.
MedChemComm | 2016
Kyle E. Denton; Casey J. Krusemark
Achieving sufficient enrichment of ligands from DNA-encoded libraries for detection can be difficult, particularly for low affinity ligands within highly complex libraries. To address this challenge, we present an approach for crosslinking DNA-linked ligands to target proteins using electrophilic or photoreactive groups. The approach involves the teathering of a ssDNA oligonucleotide to a DNA-encoded molecule to enable attachment of a reactive group post-synthetically via DNA hybridization. Crosslinking traps ligand-protein complexes while in solution and allows for stringent washing conditions to be applied in the subsequent purification. Five reactive groups (tosyl, NHS ester, sulfonyl fluoride, phenyl azide, and diazirine) were tested for crosslinking efficiency and specificity with three DNA-linked ligands to their target proteins. In a model selection, crosslinking resulted in improved enrichment of both high and a low affinity ligands in comparison to a selection with a solid-phase immobilized protein.
Angewandte Chemie | 2016
Rachael R. Jetson; Casey J. Krusemark
A sensing approach is applied to encode quantitative enzymatic activity information into DNA sequence populations. The method utilizes DNA-linked peptide substrates as activity probes. Signal detection involves chemical manipulation of a probe population downstream of sample exposure and application of purifying, selective pressure for enzyme products. Selection-induced changes in DNA abundance indicate sample activity. The detection of protein kinase, protease, and farnesyltransferase activities is demonstrated. The assays were employed to measure enzyme inhibition by small molecules and activity in cell lysates using parallel DNA sequencing or quantitative PCR. This strategy will allow the extensive infrastructure for genetic analysis to be applied to proteomic assays, which has a number of advantages in throughput, sensitivity, and sample multiplexing.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2011
Casey J. Krusemark; Brian L. Frey; Lloyd M. Smith; Peter J. Belshaw
The chemical modification of protein thiols by reduction and alkylation is common in the preparation of proteomic samples for analysis by mass spectrometry (MS). Modification at other functional groups has received less attention in MS-based proteomics. Amine modification (Lys, N-termini) by reductive dimethylation or by acylation (e.g., iTRAQ labeling) has recently gained some popularity in peptide-based approaches (bottom-up MS). Modification at acidic groups (Asp, Glu, C-termini) has been explored very minimally. Here, we describe a sequential labeling strategy that enables complete modification of thiols, amines, and acids on peptides or small intact proteins. This method includes (1) the reduction and alkylation of thiols, (2) the reductive dimethylation of amines, and (3) the amidation of acids with any of several amines. This chemical modification scheme offers several options both for the incorporation of stable isotopes for relative quantification and for improving peptides or proteins as MS analytes.
Angewandte Chemie | 2006
Shane M. Lamos; Casey J. Krusemark; Christopher J. McGee; Mark Scalf; Lloyd M. Smith; Peter J. Belshaw
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2013
Brian L. Frey; Daniel T. Ladror; Samuel B. Sondalle; Casey J. Krusemark; April L. Jue; Joshua J. Coon; Lloyd M. Smith
International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2008
Brian L. Frey; Casey J. Krusemark; Aaron R. Ledvina; Joshua J. Coon; Peter J. Belshaw; Lloyd M. Smith
Analytical Chemistry | 2008
Casey J. Krusemark; Jonathan T. Ferguson; Craig D. Wenger; Neil L. Kelleher; Peter J. Belshaw