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Dive into the research topics where Eric W. Barr is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric W. Barr.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Direct spectroscopic detection of a C-H-cleaving high-spin Fe(IV) complex in a prolyl-4-hydroxylase

Lee M. Hoffart; Eric W. Barr; Robert B. Guyer; J. Martin Bollinger; Carsten Krebs

The Fe(II)- and α-ketoglutarate (αKG)-dependent dioxygenases use mononuclear nonheme iron centers to effect hydroxylation of their substrates and decarboxylation of their cosubstrate, αKG, to CO2 and succinate. Our recent dissection of the mechanism of taurine:αKG dioxygenase (TauD), a member of this enzyme family, revealed that two transient complexes accumulate during catalysis in the presence of saturating substrates. The first complex contains the long-postulated C-H-cleaving Fe(IV)-oxo intermediate, J, and the second is an enzyme·product(s) complex. Here, we demonstrate the accumulation of two transient complexes in the reaction of a prolyl-4-hydroxylase (P4H), a functional homologue of human αKG-dependent dioxygenases with essential roles in collagen biosynthesis and oxygen sensing. The kinetic and spectroscopic properties of these two P4H complexes suggest that they are homologues of the TauD intermediates. Most notably, the first exhibits optical absorption and Mössbauer spectra similar to those of J and, like J, a large substrate deuterium kinetic isotope on its decay. The close correspondence of the accumulating states in the P4H and TauD reactions supports the hypothesis of a conserved mechanism for substrate hydroxylation by enzymes in this family.


Science | 2007

A Manganese(IV)/Iron(III) Cofactor in Chlamydia trachomatis Ribonucleotide Reductase

Wei Jiang; Danny Yun; Lana Saleh; Eric W. Barr; Gang Xing; Lee M. Hoffart; Monique-Anne Maslak; Carsten Krebs; J. Martin Bollinger

In a conventional class I ribonucleotide reductase (RNR), a diiron(II/II) cofactor in the R2 subunit reacts with oxygen to produce a diiron(III/IV) intermediate, which generates a stable tyrosyl radical (Y⚫). The Y⚫ reversibly oxidizes a cysteine residue in the R1 subunit to a cysteinyl radical (C⚫), which abstracts the 3′-hydrogen of the substrate to initiate its reduction. The RNR from Chlamydia trachomatis lacks the Y⚫, and it had been proposed that the diiron(III/IV) complex in R2 directly generates the C⚫ in R1. By enzyme activity measurements and spectroscopic methods, we show that this RNR actually uses a previously unknown stable manganese(IV)/iron(III) cofactor for radical initiation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

A long-lived, substrate-hydroxylating peroxodiiron(III/III) intermediate in the amine oxygenase, AurF, from Streptomyces thioluteus.

Victoria Korneeva Korboukh; Ning Li; Eric W. Barr; J. Martin Bollinger; Carsten Krebs

The amine oxygenase AurF from Streptomyces thioluteus catalyzes the six-electron oxidation of p-aminobenzoate (pABA) to p-nitrobenzoate (pNBA). In this work, we have studied the reaction of its reduced Fe(2)(II/II) cofactor with O(2), which results in generation of a peroxo-Fe(2)(III/III) intermediate. In the absence of substrate, this intermediate is unusually stable (t(1/2) = 7 min at 20 degrees C), allowing for its accumulation to almost stoichiometric amounts. Its decay is accelerated approximately 10(5)-fold by the substrate, pABA, implying that it is the complex that effects the two-electron oxidation of the amine to the hydroxylamine. The nearly quantitative conversion of pABA to pNBA by solutions containing an excess of the intermediate suggests that it may also be competent for the two subsequent two-electron oxidations leading to the product.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2008

Lethal Mutagenesis of Picornaviruses with N-6-Modified Purine Nucleoside Analogues

Jason D. Graci; Kathleen Too; Eric D. Smidansky; Jocelyn P. Edathil; Eric W. Barr; Daniel A. Harki; Jessica E. Galarraga; J. Martin Bollinger; Blake R. Peterson; David Loakes; Daniel M. Brown; Craig E. Cameron

ABSTRACT RNA viruses exhibit extraordinarily high mutation rates during genome replication. Nonnatural ribonucleosides that can increase the mutation rate of RNA viruses by acting as ambiguous substrates during replication have been explored as antiviral agents acting through lethal mutagenesis. We have synthesized novel N-6-substituted purine analogues with ambiguous incorporation characteristics due to tautomerization of the nucleobase. The most potent of these analogues reduced the titer of poliovirus (PV) and coxsackievirus (CVB3) over 1,000-fold during a single passage in HeLa cell culture, with an increase in transition mutation frequency up to 65-fold. Kinetic analysis of incorporation by the PV polymerase indicated that these analogues were templated ambiguously with increased efficiency compared to the known mutagenic nucleoside ribavirin. Notably, these nucleosides were not efficient substrates for cellular ribonucleotide reductase in vitro, suggesting that conversion to the deoxyriboucleoside may be hindered, potentially limiting genetic damage to the host cell. Furthermore, a high-fidelity PV variant (G64S) displayed resistance to the antiviral effect and mutagenic potential of these analogues. These purine nucleoside analogues represent promising lead compounds in the development of clinically useful antiviral therapies based on the strategy of lethal mutagenesis.


Biochemistry | 2009

Kinetic mechanism of ornithine hydroxylase (PvdA) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa: substrate triggering of O2 addition but not flavin reduction.

Kathleen M. Meneely; Eric W. Barr; J. Martin Bollinger; Audrey L. Lamb

PvdA catalyzes the hydroxylation of the side chain primary amine of ornithine in the initial step of the biosynthesis of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa siderophore pyoverdin. The reaction requires FAD, NADPH, and O(2). PvdA uses the same cosubstrates as several flavin-dependent hydroxylases that differ one from another in the kinetic mechanisms of their oxidative and reductive half-reactions. Therefore, the mechanism of PvdA was determined by absorption stopped-flow experiments. By contrast to some flavin-dependent hydroxylases (notably, p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase), binding of the hydroxylation target is not required to trigger reduction of the flavin by NADPH: the reductive half-reaction is equally facile in the presence and absence of ornithine. Reaction of O(2) with FADH(2) in the oxidative half-reaction is accelerated by ornithine 80-fold, providing a mechanism by which PvdA can ensure coupling of NADPH and ornithine oxidation. In the presence of ornithine, the expected C(4a)-hydroperoxyflavin intermediate with 390 nm absorption accumulates and decays to the C(4a)-hydroxyflavin in a kinetically competent fashion. The slower oxidative half-reaction that occurs in the absence of ornithine involves accumulation of an oxygenated flavin species and two subsequent states that are tentatively assigned as C(4a)-peroxy- and C(4a)-hydroperoxyflavin intermediates and the oxidized flavin. The enzyme generates stoichiometric hydrogen peroxide in lieu of hydroxyornithine. The data suggest that PvdA employs a kinetic mechanism that is a hybrid of those previously documented for other flavin-dependent hydroxylases.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Cryoreduction of the NO-Adduct of Taurine:α-Ketoglutarate Dioxygenase (TauD) Yields an Elusive {FeNO}8 Species

Shengfa Ye; John C. Price; Eric W. Barr; Michael T. Green; J. Martin Bollinger; Carsten Krebs; Frank Neese

The Fe(II)- and alpha-ketoglutarate (alphaKG)-dependent enzymes are a functionally and mechanistically diverse group of mononuclear nonheme-iron enzymes that activate dioxygen to couple the decarboxylation of alphaKG, which yields succinate and CO(2), to the oxidation of an aliphatic C-H bond of their substrates. Their mechanisms have been studied in detail by a combination of kinetic, spectroscopic, and computational methods. Two reaction intermediates have been trapped and characterized for several members of this enzyme family. The first intermediate is the C-H-cleaving Fe(IV)-oxo complex, which exhibits a large deuterium kinetic isotope effect on its decay. The second intermediate is a Fe(II):product complex. Reaction intermediates proposed to occur before the Fe(IV)-oxo intermediate do not accumulate and therefore cannot be characterized experimentally. One of these intermediates is the initial O(2) adduct, which is a {FeO(2)}(8) species in the notation introduced by Enemark and Feltham. Here, we report spectroscopic and computational studies on the stable NO-adduct of taurine:alphaKG dioxygenase (TauD), termed TauD-{FeNO}(7), and its one-electron reduced form, TauD-{FeNO}(8). The latter is isoelectronic with the proposed O(2) adduct and was generated by low-temperature gamma-irradiation of TauD-{FeNO}(7). To our knowledge, TauD-{FeNO}(8) is the first paramagnetic {FeNO}(8) complex. The detailed analysis of experimental and computational results shows that TauD-{FeNO}(8) has a triplet ground state. This has mechanistic implications that are discussed in this Article. Annealing of the triplet {FeNO}(8) species presumably leads to an equally elusive {FeHNO}(8) complex with a quintet ground state.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Spectroscopic Evidence for the Two C-H-Cleaving Intermediates of Aspergillus nidulans Isopenicillin N Synthase.

Esta Y. Tamanaha; Bo Zhang; Yisong Guo; Wei-chen Chang; Eric W. Barr; Gang Xing; Jennifer St. Clair; Shengfa Ye; Frank Neese; J. Martin Bollinger; Carsten Krebs

The enzyme isopenicillin N synthase (IPNS) installs the β-lactam and thiazolidine rings of the penicillin core into the linear tripeptide l-δ-aminoadipoyl-l-Cys-d-Val (ACV) on the pathways to a number of important antibacterial drugs. A classic set of enzymological and crystallographic studies by Baldwin and co-workers established that this overall four-electron oxidation occurs by a sequence of two oxidative cyclizations, with the β-lactam ring being installed first and the thiazolidine ring second. Each phase requires cleavage of an aliphatic C-H bond of the substrate: the pro-S-CCys,β-H bond for closure of the β-lactam ring, and the CVal,β-H bond for installation of the thiazolidine ring. IPNS uses a mononuclear non-heme-iron(II) cofactor and dioxygen as cosubstrate to cleave these C-H bonds and direct the ring closures. Despite the intense scrutiny to which the enzyme has been subjected, the identities of the oxidized iron intermediates that cleave the C-H bonds have been addressed only computationally; no experimental insight into their geometric or electronic structures has been reported. In this work, we have employed a combination of transient-state-kinetic and spectroscopic methods, together with the specifically deuterium-labeled substrates, A[d2-C]V and AC[d8-V], to identify both C-H-cleaving intermediates. The results show that they are high-spin Fe(III)-superoxo and high-spin Fe(IV)-oxo complexes, respectively, in agreement with published mechanistic proposals derived computationally from Baldwins founding work.


Biochemistry | 2003

The First Direct Characterization of a High-Valent Iron Intermediate in the Reaction of an α-Ketoglutarate-Dependent Dioxygenase: A High-Spin Fe(IV) Complex in Taurine/α-Ketoglutarate Dioxygenase (TauD) from Escherichia coli,

John C. Price; Eric W. Barr; Bhramara Tirupati; and J. Martin Bollinger; Carsten Krebs


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2003

Evidence for Hydrogen Abstraction from C1 of Taurine by the High-Spin Fe(IV) Intermediate Detected during Oxygen Activation by Taurine:α-Ketoglutarate Dioxygenase (TauD)

John C. Price; Eric W. Barr; Timothy E. Glass; Carsten Krebs,‡,‖ and; J. Martin Bollinger


Nature Chemical Biology | 2007

Two interconverting Fe( IV ) intermediates in aliphatic chlorination by the halogenase CytC3

Danica P Galoni cacute; Eric W. Barr; Christopher T. Walsh; J. Martin Bollinger; Carsten Krebs

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J. Martin Bollinger

Pennsylvania State University

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Carsten Krebs

Pennsylvania State University

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John C. Price

University of Colorado Boulder

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Lee M. Hoffart

Pennsylvania State University

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Gang Xing

Pennsylvania State University

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C. Channa Reddy

Pennsylvania State University

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