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Dive into the research topics where Isaac Carrico is active.

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Featured researches published by Isaac Carrico.


ChemBioChem | 2002

Biosynthesis of proteins incorporating a versatile set of phenylalanine analogues.

Kent Kirshenbaum; Isaac Carrico; David A. Tirrell

Unnatural amino acids with useful chemical functionality can replace phenylalanine in bacterial proteins. Coexpression of a promiscuous phenylalanine-tRNA synthetase mutant enables the synthesis of target proteins bearing iodophenyl, cyanophenyl, ethynylphenyl, azidophenyl, and pyridyl groups (see general structures). Proteins incorporating the analogues have a range of potential applications, including Pd-mediated conjugation (R=CCH), photoaffinity labeling (R=N_3), X-ray phasing (R=I), and novel metal coordination (R=pyridyl).


Methods in Enzymology | 2006

Metabolic Labeling of Glycans with Azido Sugars for Visualization and Glycoproteomics

Scott T. Laughlin; Nicholas J. Agard; Jeremy M. Baskin; Isaac Carrico; Pamela V. Chang; Anjali S. Ganguli; Matthew J. Hangauer; Anderson Lo; Jennifer A. Prescher; Carolyn R. Bertozzi

The staggering complexity of glycans renders their analysis extraordinarily difficult, particularly in living systems. A recently developed technology, termed metabolic oligosaccharide engineering, enables glycan labeling with probes for visualization in cells and living animals, and enrichment of specific glycoconjugate types for proteomic analysis. This technology involves metabolic labeling of glycans with a specifically reactive, abiotic functional group, the azide. Azido sugars are fed to cells and integrated by the glycan biosynthetic machinery into various glycoconjugates. The azido sugars are then covalently tagged, either ex vivo or in vivo, using one of two azide-specific chemistries: the Staudinger ligation, or the strain-promoted [3+2] cycloaddition. These reactions can be used to tag glycans with imaging probes or epitope tags, thus enabling the visualization or enrichment of glycoconjugates. Applications to noninvasive imaging and glycoproteomic analyses are discussed.


Biochemistry | 2009

Interpretation of p-Cyanophenylalanine Fluorescence in Proteins in Terms of Solvent Exposure and Contribution of Side-Chain Quenchers: A Combined Fluorescence, IR and Molecular Dynamics Study

Humeyra Taskent-Sezgin; Juah Chung; Vadim Patsalo; Shigeki J. Miyake-Stoner; Andrew Miller; Scott H. Brewer; Ryan A. Mehl; David F. Green; Daniel P. Raleigh; Isaac Carrico

The use of noncoded amino acids as spectroscopic probes of protein folding and function is growing rapidly, in large part because of advances in the methodology for their incorporation. Recently p-cyanophenylalanine has been employed as a fluorescence and IR probe, as well as a FRET probe to study protein folding, protein-membrane interactions, protein-protein interactions and amyloid formation. The probe has been shown to be exquisitely sensitive to hydrogen bonding interactions involving the cyano group, and its fluorescence quantum yield increases dramatically when it is hydrogen bonded. However, a detailed understanding of the factors which influence its fluorescence is required to be able to use this popular probe accurately. Here we demonstrate the recombinant incorporation of p-cyanophenylalanine in the N-terminal domain of the ribosomal protein L9. Native state fluorescence is very low, which suggests that the group is sequestered from solvent; however, IR measurements and molecular dynamics simulations show that the cyano group is exposed to solvent and forms hydrogen bonds to water. Analysis of mutant proteins and model peptides demonstrates that the reduced native state fluorescence is caused by the effective quenching of p-cyanophenylalanine fluorescence via FRET to tyrosine side-chains. The implications for the interpretation of p-cyanophenylalanine fluorescence measurements and FRET studies are discussed.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1997

A potentially general intramolecular biaryl coupling approach to optically pure 2,2′-BINOL analogs

Bruce H. Lipshutz; Brian James; Shelly Vance; Isaac Carrico

Abstract Tethering of two equivalents of mono-protected 2,7-dihydroxynaphthalene gives an intermediate which allows for eventual copper-catalyzed intramolecular biaryl coupling to afford a new nonracemic BINOL documenting a new strategy to modified binaphthyl ligands.


Biochemistry | 2010

Modulation of p-Cyanophenylalanine Fluorescence by Amino Acid Side Chains and Rational Design of Fluorescence Probes of α-Helix Formation

Humeyra Taskent-Sezgin; Peter Marek; Rosanne Thomas; Daniel E. Goldberg; Juah Chung; Isaac Carrico; Daniel P. Raleigh

p-Cyanophenylalanine is an extremely useful fluorescence probe of protein structure that can be recombinantly and chemically incorporated into proteins. The probe has been used to study protein folding, protein-membrane interactions, protein-peptide interactions, and amyloid formation; however, the factors that control its fluorescence are not fully understood. Hydrogen bonding to the cyano group is known to play a major role in modulating the fluorescence quantum yield, but the role of potential side-chain quenchers has not yet been elucidated. A systematic study of the effects of different side chains on p-cyanophenylalanine fluorescence is reported. Tyr is found to have the largest effect followed by deprotonated His, Met, Cys, protonated His, Asn, Arg, and protonated Lys. Deprotonated amino groups are much more effective fluorescence quenchers than protonated amino groups. Free neutral imidazole and hydroxide ion are also effective quenchers of p-cyanophenylalanine fluorescence with Stern-Volmer constants of 39.8 and 22.1 M(-1), respectively. The quenching of p-cyanophenylalanine fluorescence by specific side chains is exploited in developing specific, high-sensitivity, fluorescence probes of helix formation. The approach is demonstrated with Ala-based peptides that contain a p-cyanophenylalanine-His or a p-cyanophenylalanine-Tyr pair located at positions i and i + 4. The p-cyanophenylalanine-His pair is most useful when the His side chain is deprotonated and is, thus, complementary to the Trp-His pair which is most sensitive when the His side chain is protonated.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Differential ordering of the protein backbone and side chains during protein folding revealed by site-specific recombinant infrared probes

Sureshbabu Nagarajan; Humeyra Taskent-Sezgin; Dzmitry Parul; Isaac Carrico; Daniel P. Raleigh; R. Brian Dyer

The time scale for ordering of the polypeptide backbone relative to the side chains is a critical issue in protein folding. The interplay between ordering of the backbone and ordering of the side chains is particularly important for the formation of β-sheet structures, as the polypeptide chain searches for the native stabilizing cross-strand interactions. We have studied these issues in the N-terminal domain of protein L9 (NTL9), a model protein with mixed α/β structure. We have developed a general approach for introducing site-specific IR probes for the side chains (azide) and backbone ((13)C═(18)O) using recombinant protein expression. Temperature-jump time-resolved IR spectroscopy combined with site-specific labeling enables independent measurement of the respective backbone and side-chain dynamics with single residue resolution. We have found that side-chain ordering in a key region of the β-sheet structure occurs on a slower time scale than ordering of the backbone during the folding of NTL9, likely as a result of the transient formation of non-native side-chain interactions.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2014

General Strategy for the Bioorthogonal Incorporation of Strongly Absorbing, Solvation-Sensitive Infrared Probes into Proteins

Ivan Peran; Tracey A. Oudenhoven; Ann Marie Woys; Matthew D. Watson; Tianqi O. Zhang; Isaac Carrico; Martin T. Zanni; Daniel P. Raleigh

A high-sensitivity metal-carbonyl-based IR probe is described that can be incorporated into proteins or other biomolecules in very high yield via Click chemistry. A two-step strategy is demonstrated. First, a methionine auxotroph is used to incorporate the unnatural amino acid azidohomoalanine at high levels. Second, a tricarbonyl (η5-cyclopentadienyl) rhenium(I) probe modified with an alkynyl linkage is coupled via the Click reaction. We demonstrate these steps using the C-terminal domain of the ribosomal protein L9 as a model system. An overall incorporation level of 92% was obtained at residue 109, which is a surface-exposed residue. Incorporation of the probe into a surface site is shown not to perturb the stability or structure of the target protein. Metal carbonyls are known to be sensitive to solvation and protein electrostatics through vibrational lifetimes and frequency shifts. We report that the frequencies and lifetimes of this probe also depend on the isotopic composition of the solvent. Comparison of the lifetimes measured in H2O versus D2O provides a probe of solvent accessibility. The metal carbonyl probe reported here provides an easy and robust method to label very large proteins with an amino-acid-specific tag that is both environmentally sensitive and a very strong absorber.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Light-Activated Staudinger–Bertozzi Ligation within Living Animals

Lisa Shah; Scott T. Laughlin; Isaac Carrico

The ability to regulate small molecule chemistry in vivo will enable new avenues of exploration in imaging and pharmacology. However, realization of these goals will require reactions with high specificity and precise control. Here we demonstrate photocontrol over the highly specific Staudinger-Bertozzi ligation in vitro and in vivo. Our simple approach, photocaging the key phosphine atom, allows for the facile production of reagents with photochemistry that can be engineered for specific applications. The resulting compounds, which are both stable and efficiently activated, enable the spatial labeling of metabolically introduced azides in vitro and on live zebrafish.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2012

Chemoselective Modification of Viral Surfaces via Bioorthogonal Click Chemistry

Frederick A. Rubino; Yoon Hyeun Oum; Lakshmi Rajaram; Yanjie Chu; Isaac Carrico

The modification of virus particles has received a significant amount of attention for its tremendous potential for impacting gene therapy, oncolytic applications and vaccine development. Current approaches to modifying viral surfaces, which are mostly genetics-based, often suffer from attenuation of virus production, infectivity and cellular transduction. Using chemoselective click chemistry, we have developed a straightforward alternative approach which sidesteps these issues while remaining both highly flexible and accessible. The goal of this protocol is to demonstrate the effectiveness of using bioorthogonal click chemistry to modify the surface of adenovirus type 5 particles. This two-step process can be used both therapeutically or analytically, as it allows for chemoselective ligation of targeting molecules, dyes or other molecules of interest onto proteins pre-labeled with azide tags. The three major advantages of this method are that (1) metabolic labeling demonstrates little to no impact on viral fitness, (2) a wide array of effector ligands can be utilized, and (3) it is remarkably fast, reliable and easy to access. In the first step of this procedure, adenovirus particles are produced bearing either azidohomoalanine (Aha, a methionine surrogate) or the unnatural sugar O-linked N-azidoacetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAz), both of which contain the azide (-N3) functional group. After purification of the azide-modified virus particles, an alkyne probe containing the fluorescent TAMRA moiety is ligated in a chemoselective manner to the pre-labeled proteins or glycoproteins. Finally, an SDS-PAGE analysis is performed to demonstrate the successful ligation of the probe onto the viral capsid proteins. Aha incorporation is shown to label all viral capsid proteins (Hexon, Penton and Fiber), while O-GlcNAz incorporation results in labeling of Fiber only. In this evolving field, multiple methods for azide-alkyne ligation have been successfully developed; however only the two we have found to be most convenient are demonstrated herein - strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition (SPAAC) and copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) under deoxygenated atmosphere.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2012

Altering Adenoviral Tropism via Click Modification with ErbB Specific Ligands

Yoon Hyeun Oum; Isaac Carrico

Methods for targeting oncolytic viruses can increase efficacy and accelerate development. Genetic engineering, the predominant method for changing vector tropism, is limited in scope and often represents the bottleneck for vector development. Metabolic incorporation of an unnatural azido sugar, O-GlcNAz, at a specific site on the adenoviral surface allows chemoselective attachment of affibodies for Her2 or EGF receptors. Modification with these high-affinity, high-selectivity proteins is straightforward and readily generalizable, demonstrates minimal impact on virus physiology, and affords significant increases in gene delivery to cancer cells. As a result, this method has significant potential to increase the efficacy of next-generation viral vectors.

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David A. Tirrell

California Institute of Technology

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Deepshikha Datta

California Institute of Technology

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Pin Wang

University of Southern California

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Stephen L. Mayo

California Institute of Technology

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Juah Chung

Stony Brook University

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