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Dive into the research topics where Farhad Moshiri is active.

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Featured researches published by Farhad Moshiri.


The Plant Cell | 2006

The Arabidopsis vitamin E pathway gene5-1 Mutant Reveals a Critical Role for Phytol Kinase in Seed Tocopherol Biosynthesis

Henry E. Valentin; Kim Lincoln; Farhad Moshiri; Pamela K. Jensen; Qungang Qi; Tyamagondlu V. Venkatesh; Balasulojini Karunanandaa; Susan R. Baszis; Susan R. Norris; Beth Savidge; Kenneth J. Gruys

We report the identification and characterization of a low tocopherol Arabidopsis thaliana mutant, vitamin E pathway gene5-1 (vte5-1), with seed tocopherol levels reduced to 20% of the wild type. Map-based identification of the responsible mutation identified a G→A transition, resulting in the introduction of a stop codon in At5g04490, a previously unannotated gene, which we named VTE5. Complementation of the mutation with the wild-type transgene largely restored the wild-type tocopherol phenotype. A knockout mutation of the Synechocystis sp PCC 6803 VTE5 homolog slr1652 reduced Synechocystis tocopherol levels by 50% or more. Bioinformatic analysis of VTE5 and slr1652 indicated modest similarity to dolichol kinase. Analysis of extracts from Arabidopsis and Synechocystis mutants revealed increased accumulation of free phytol. Heterologous expression of these genes in Escherichia coli supplemented with free phytol and in vitro assays of recombinant protein produced phytylmonophosphate, suggesting that VTE5 and slr1652 encode phytol kinases. The phenotype of the vte5-1 mutant is consistent with the hypothesis that chlorophyll degradation-derived phytol serves as an important intermediate in seed tocopherol synthesis and forces reevaluation of the role of geranylgeranyl diphosphate reductase in tocopherol biosynthesis.


Nature | 2016

Continuous evolution of Bacillus thuringiensis toxins overcomes insect resistance

Ahmed H. Badran; Victor M. Guzov; Qing Huai; Melissa M. Kemp; Prashanth Vishwanath; Wendy Kain; Autumn M. Nance; Artem G. Evdokimov; Farhad Moshiri; Keith Turner; Ping Wang; Thomas M. Malvar; David R. Liu

The Bacillus thuringiensis δ-endotoxins (Bt toxins) are widely used insecticidal proteins in engineered crops that provide agricultural, economic, and environmental benefits. The development of insect resistance to Bt toxins endangers their long-term effectiveness. Here we have developed a phage-assisted continuous evolution selection that rapidly evolves high-affinity protein–protein interactions, and applied this system to evolve variants of the Bt toxin Cry1Ac that bind a cadherin-like receptor from the insect pest Trichoplusia ni (TnCAD) that is not natively bound by wild-type Cry1Ac. The resulting evolved Cry1Ac variants bind TnCAD with high affinity (dissociation constant Kd = 11–41 nM), kill TnCAD-expressing insect cells that are not susceptible to wild-type Cry1Ac, and kill Cry1Ac-resistant T. ni insects up to 335-fold more potently than wild-type Cry1Ac. Our findings establish that the evolution of Bt toxins with novel insect cell receptor affinity can overcome insect Bt toxin resistance and confer lethality approaching that of the wild-type Bt toxin against non-resistant insects.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

Dicamba Monooxygenase: Structural Insights into a Dynamic Rieske Oxygenase that Catalyzes an Exocyclic Monooxygenation☆

Robert L. D'ordine; Timothy J. Rydel; Michael J. Storek; Eric J. Sturman; Farhad Moshiri; Ryan K. Bartlett; Gregory R. Brown; Robert J. Eilers; Crystal L. Dart; Youlin Qi; Stanislaw Flasinski; Sonya J. Franklin

Dicamba (2-methoxy-3,6-dichlorobenzoic acid) O-demethylase (DMO) is the terminal Rieske oxygenase of a three-component system that includes a ferredoxin and a reductase. It catalyzes the NADH-dependent oxidative demethylation of the broad leaf herbicide dicamba. DMO represents the first crystal structure of a Rieske non-heme iron oxygenase that performs an exocyclic monooxygenation, incorporating O(2) into a side-chain moiety and not a ring system. The structure reveals a 3-fold symmetric trimer (alpha(3)) in the crystallographic asymmetric unit with similar arrangement of neighboring inter-subunit Rieske domain and non-heme iron site enabling electron transport consistent with other structurally characterized Rieske oxygenases. While the Rieske domain is similar, differences are observed in the catalytic domain, which is smaller in sequence length than those described previously, yet possessing an active-site cavity of larger volume when compared to oxygenases with larger substrates. Consistent with the amphipathic substrate, the active site is designed to interact with both the carboxylate and aromatic ring with both key polar and hydrophobic interactions observed. DMO structures were solved with and without substrate (dicamba), product (3,6-dichlorosalicylic acid), and either cobalt or iron in the non-heme iron site. The substitution of cobalt for iron revealed an uncommon mode of non-heme iron binding trapped by the non-catalytic Co(2+), which, we postulate, may be transiently present in the native enzyme during the catalytic cycle. Thus, we present four DMO structures with resolutions ranging from 1.95 to 2.2 A, which, in sum, provide a snapshot of a dynamic enzyme where metal binding and substrate binding are coupled to observed structural changes in the non-heme iron and catalytic sites.


Biochemistry | 2003

The crystal structure, mutagenesis, and activity studies reveal that patatin is a lipid acyl hydrolase with a Ser-Asp catalytic dyad.

Timothy J. Rydel; Jennifer M. Williams; Elysia K. Krieger; Farhad Moshiri; William C. Stallings; Sherri M. Brown; Jay C. Pershing; John P. Purcell; Murtaza F. Alibhai


Metabolic Engineering | 2005

Metabolically engineered oilseed crops with enhanced seed tocopherol

Balasulojini Karunanandaa; Qungang Qi; Ming Hao; Susan R. Baszis; Pamela K. Jensen; Yun-Hua H. Wong; Jian Jiang; Mylavarapu Venkatramesh; Kenneth J. Gruys; Farhad Moshiri; Dusty Post-Beittenmiller; James D. Weiss; Henry E. Valentin


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1994

Bacterial genes involved in incorporation of nickel into a hydrogenase enzyme

Changlin Fu; Sam Javedan; Farhad Moshiri; Robert J. Maier


Archive | 2001

Polypeptide compositions toxic to anthonomus insects, and methods of use

Barbara G. Isaac; Elysia K. Krieger; Anne-Marie Light Mettus; Farhad Moshiri; Sakuntala Sivasupramanian


Archive | 2003

Tocopherol biosynthesis related genes and uses thereof

Susan R. Norris; Kim Lincoln; Mark S. Abad; Robert J. Eilers; Karen Kindle Hartsuyker; Joseph Hirschberg; Balasulojini Karunanandaa; Farhad Moshiri; Joshua C. Stein; Henry E. Valentin; Tyamagondlu V. Venkatesh


Biochemistry | 1995

The "nitrogenase-protective" FeSII protein of Azotobacter vinelandii: overexpression, characterization, and crystallization

Farhad Moshiri; Brian R. Crouse; Michael K. Johnson; Robert J. Maier


Archive | 2005

Genes encoding 4-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) enzymes for plant metabolic engineering

Farhad Moshiri; Ming Hao; Balasulojini Karunanandaa; Henry E. Valentin; Tyamagondlu V. Venkatesh; Yun-Hua Huang Wong

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