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Dive into the research topics where Chris Bialas is active.

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Featured researches published by Chris Bialas.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2013

Elementary tetrahelical protein design for diverse oxidoreductase functions

Tammer A. Farid; Goutham Kodali; Lee A. Solomon; Bruce R. Lichtenstein; Molly M. Sheehan; Bryan A. Fry; Chris Bialas; Nathan M. Ennist; Jessica A Siedlecki; Zhenyu Zhao; Matthew A. Stetz; Kathleen G. Valentine; J. L. Ross Anderson; A. Joshua Wand; Bohdana M. Discher; Christopher C. Moser; P. Leslie Dutton

Emulating functions of natural enzymes in man-made constructs has proven challenging. Here we describe a man-made protein platform that reproduces many of the diverse functions of natural oxidoreductases without importing the complex and obscure interactions common to natural proteins. Our design is founded on an elementary, structurally stable 4-α-helix protein monomer with a minimalist interior malleable enough to accommodate various light- and redox-active cofactors and with an exterior tolerating extensive charge patterning for modulation of redox cofactor potentials and environmental interactions. Despite its modest size, the construct offers several independent domains for functional engineering that targets diverse natural activities, including dioxygen binding and superoxide and peroxide generation, interprotein electron transfer to natural cytochrome c and light-activated intraprotein energy transfer and charge separation approximating the core reactions of photosynthesis, cryptochrome and photolyase. The highly stable, readily expressible and biocompatible characteristics of these open-ended designs promise development of practical in vitro and in vivo applications.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2012

Engineering oxidoreductases: maquette proteins designed from scratch.

Bruce R. Lichtenstein; Tammer A. Farid; Goutham Kodali; Lee A. Solomon; J. L. Ross Anderson; Molly M. Sheehan; Nathan M. Ennist; Bryan A. Fry; Sarah E. Chobot; Chris Bialas; Joshua A. Mancini; Craig T. Armstrong; Zhenyu Zhao; Tatiana V. Esipova; David Snell; Sergei A. Vinogradov; Bohdana M. Discher; Christopher C. Moser; P. Leslie Dutton

The study of natural enzymes is complicated by the fact that only the most recent evolutionary progression can be observed. In particular, natural oxidoreductases stand out as profoundly complex proteins in which the molecular roots of function, structure and biological integration are collectively intertwined and individually obscured. In the present paper, we describe our experimental approach that removes many of these often bewildering complexities to identify in simple terms the necessary and sufficient requirements for oxidoreductase function. Ours is a synthetic biology approach that focuses on from-scratch construction of protein maquettes designed principally to promote or suppress biologically relevant oxidations and reductions. The approach avoids mimicry and divorces the commonly made and almost certainly false ascription of atomistically detailed functionally unique roles to a particular protein primary sequence, to gain a new freedom to explore protein-based enzyme function. Maquette design and construction methods make use of iterative steps, retraceable when necessary, to successfully develop a protein family of sturdy and versatile single-chain three- and four-α-helical structural platforms readily expressible in bacteria. Internally, they prove malleable enough to incorporate in prescribed positions most natural redox cofactors and many more simplified synthetic analogues. External polarity, charge-patterning and chemical linkers direct maquettes to functional assembly in membranes, on nanostructured titania, and to organize on selected planar surfaces and materials. These protein maquettes engage in light harvesting and energy transfer, in photochemical charge separation and electron transfer, in stable dioxygen binding and in simple oxidative chemistry that is the basis of multi-electron oxidative and reductive catalysis.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Designing Light‐Activated Charge‐Separating Proteins with a Naphthoquinone Amino Acid

Bruce R. Lichtenstein; Chris Bialas; Jose F. Cerda; Bryan A. Fry; P. Leslie Dutton; Christopher C. Moser

The first principles design of manmade redox-protein maquettes is used to clarify the physical/chemical engineering supporting the mechanisms of natural enzymes with a view to recapitulate and surpass natural performance. Herein, we use intein-based protein semisynthesis to pair a synthetic naphthoquinone amino acid (Naq) with histidine-ligated photoactive metal-tetrapyrrole cofactors, creating a 100 μs photochemical charge separation unit akin to photosynthetic reaction centers. By using propargyl groups to protect the redox-active para-quinone during synthesis and assembly while permitting selective activation, we gain the ability to employ the quinone amino acid redox cofactor with the full set of natural amino acids in protein design. Direct anchoring of quinone to the protein backbone permits secure and adaptable control of intraprotein electron-tunneling distances and rates.


Methods in Enzymology | 2016

De Novo Construction of Redox Active Proteins.

Christopher C. Moser; Molly M. Sheehan; Nathan M. Ennist; Goutham Kodali; Chris Bialas; Michael T. Englander; Bohdana M. Discher; P.L. Dutton

Relatively simple principles can be used to plan and construct de novo proteins that bind redox cofactors and participate in a range of electron-transfer reactions analogous to those seen in natural oxidoreductase proteins. These designed redox proteins are called maquettes. Hydrophobic/hydrophilic binary patterning of heptad repeats of amino acids linked together in a single-chain self-assemble into 4-alpha-helix bundles. These bundles form a robust and adaptable frame for uncovering the default properties of protein embedded cofactors independent of the complexities introduced by generations of natural selection and allow us to better understand what factors can be exploited by man or nature to manipulate the physical chemical properties of these cofactors. Anchoring of redox cofactors such as hemes, light active tetrapyrroles, FeS clusters, and flavins by His and Cys residues allow cofactors to be placed at positions in which electron-tunneling rates between cofactors within or between proteins can be predicted in advance. The modularity of heptad repeat designs facilitates the construction of electron-transfer chains and novel combinations of redox cofactors and new redox cofactor assisted functions. Developing de novo designs that can support cofactor incorporation upon expression in a cell is needed to support a synthetic biology advance that integrates with natural bioenergetic pathways.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Engineering an Artificial Flavoprotein Magnetosensor

Chris Bialas; Lauren E. Jarocha; Kevin B. Henbest; Tilo M. Zollitsch; Goutham Kodali; Christiane R. Timmel; Stuart R. Mackenzie; P. Leslie Dutton; Christopher C. Moser; P. J. Hore

Migratory birds use the Earths magnetic field as a source of navigational information. This light-dependent magnetic compass is thought to be mediated by cryptochrome proteins in the retina. Upon light activation, electron transfer between the flavin adenine dinucleotide cofactor and tryptophan residues leads to the formation of a spin-correlated radical pair, whose subsequent fate is sensitive to external magnetic fields. To learn more about the functional requirements of this complex chemical compass, we have created a family of simplified, adaptable proteins-maquettes-that contain a single tryptophan residue at different distances from a covalently bound flavin. Despite the complete absence of structural resemblance to the native cryptochrome fold or sequence, the maquettes exhibit a strong magnetic field effect that rivals those observed in the natural proteins in vitro. These novel maquette designs offer unprecedented flexibility to explore the basic requirements for magnetic sensing in a protein environment.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Magnetically Sensitive Radical Photochemistry of Non-natural Flavoproteins

Tilo M. Zollitsch; Lauren E. Jarocha; Chris Bialas; Kevin B. Henbest; Goutham Kodali; P. Leslie Dutton; Christopher C. Moser; Christiane R. Timmel; P. J. Hore; Stuart R. Mackenzie

It is a remarkable fact that ∼50 μT magnetic fields can alter the rates and yields of certain free-radical reactions and that such effects might be the basis of the light-dependent ability of migratory birds to sense the direction of the Earths magnetic field. The most likely sensory molecule at the heart of this chemical compass is cryptochrome, a flavin-containing protein that undergoes intramolecular, blue-light-induced electron transfer to produce magnetically sensitive radical pairs. To learn more about the factors that control the magnetic sensitivity of cryptochromes, we have used a set of de novo designed protein maquettes that self-assemble as four-α-helical proteins incorporating a single tryptophan residue as an electron donor placed approximately 0.6, 1.1, or 1.7 nm away from a covalently attached riboflavin as chromophore and electron acceptor. Using a specifically developed form of cavity ring-down spectroscopy, we have characterized the photochemistry of these designed flavoprotein maquettes to determine the identities and kinetics of the transient radicals responsible for the magnetic field effects. Given the gross structural and dynamic differences from the natural proteins, it is remarkable that the maquettes show magnetic field effects that are so similar to those observed for cryptochromes.


Journal of Fluorescence | 2017

Tryptophan Fluorescence Yields and Lifetimes as a Probe of Conformational Changes in Human Glucokinase

Bogumil Zelent; Chris Bialas; Ignacy Gryczynski; Pan Chen; Rahul Chib; Karina Lewerissa; Maria G. Corradini; Richard D. Ludescher; Jane M. Vanderkooi; Franz M. Matschinsky

Five variants of glucokinase (ATP-D-hexose-6-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.1) including wild type and single Trp mutants with the Trp residue at positions 65, 99, 167 and 257 were prepared. The fluorescence of Trp in all locations studied showed intensity changes when glucose bound, indicating that conformational change occurs globally over the entire protein. While the fluorescence quantum yield changes upon glucose binding, the enzyme’s absorption spectra, emission spectra and fluorescence lifetimes change very little. These results are consistent with the existence of a dark complex for excited state Trp. Addition of glycerol, L-glucose, sucrose, or trehalose increases the binding affinity of glucose to the enzyme and increases fluorescence intensity. The effect of these osmolytes is thought to shift the protein conformation to a condensed, high affinity form. Based upon these results, we consider the nature of quenching of the Trp excited state. Amide groups are known to quench indole fluorescence and amides of the polypeptide chain make interact with excited state Trp in the relatively unstructured, glucose-free enzyme. Also, removal of water around the aromatic ring by addition of glucose substrate or osmolyte may reduce the quenching.


Archive | 2017

Maquette Strategy for Creation of Light- and Redox-Active Proteins

Nathan M. Ennist; Joshua A. Mancini; Dirk B. Auman; Chris Bialas; Martin J. Iwanicki; Tatiana V. Esipova; Bohdana M. Discher; Christopher C. Moser; P. Leslie Dutton


Nature Chemical Biology | 2014

Corrigendum: Elementary tetrahelical protein design for diverse oxidoreductase functions

Tammer A. Farid; Goutham Kodali; Lee A. Solomon; Bruce R. Lichtenstein; Molly M. Sheehan; Bryan A. Fry; Chris Bialas; Nathan M. Ennist; Jessica A Siedlecki; Zhenyu Zhao; Matthew A. Stetz; Kathleen G. Valentine; J. L. Ross Anderson; A. Joshua Wand; Bohdana M. Discher; Christopher C. Moser; P. Leslie Dutton


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014

Toward the biogenesis of manmade oxidoreductases working in cells

P. Leslie Dutton; Goutham Kodali; Joshua A. Mancini; Nathan M. Ennist; Steve E Stayrook; Zhenyu Zhao; Michael T. Englander; Molly M. Sheehan; Bryan A. Fry; Chris Bialas; Tatiana V. Esipovo; Sergei A. Vinogradov; Geetha Goparaju; Daniel W. Watkins; Craig T. Armstrong; J. L. Ross Anderson; Bohdana M. Discher; Christopher C. Moser

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P. Leslie Dutton

University of Pennsylvania

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Goutham Kodali

University of Pennsylvania

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Bryan A. Fry

University of Pennsylvania

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Molly M. Sheehan

University of Pennsylvania

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Nathan M. Ennist

University of Pennsylvania

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Zhenyu Zhao

University of Pennsylvania

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