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Dive into the research topics where Jack E. Richman is active.

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Featured researches published by Jack E. Richman.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Widespread Head-to-Head Hydrocarbon Biosynthesis in Bacteria and Role of OleA

David J. Sukovich; Jennifer L. Seffernick; Jack E. Richman; Jeffrey A. Gralnick; Lawrence P. Wackett

ABSTRACT Previous studies identified the oleABCD genes involved in head-to-head olefinic hydrocarbon biosynthesis. The present study more fully defined the OleABCD protein families within the thiolase, α/β-hydrolase, AMP-dependent ligase/synthase, and short-chain dehydrogenase superfamilies, respectively. Only 0.1 to 1% of each superfamily represents likely Ole proteins. Sequence analysis based on structural alignments and gene context was used to identify highly likely ole genes. Selected microorganisms from the phyla Verucomicrobia, Planctomyces, Chloroflexi, Proteobacteria, and Actinobacteria were tested experimentally and shown to produce long-chain olefinic hydrocarbons. However, different species from the same genera sometimes lack the ole genes and fail to produce olefinic hydrocarbons. Overall, only 1.9% of 3,558 genomes analyzed showed clear evidence for containing ole genes. The type of olefins produced by different bacteria differed greatly with respect to the number of carbon-carbon double bonds. The greatest number of organisms surveyed biosynthesized a single long-chain olefin, 3,6,9,12,15,19,22,25,28-hentriacontanonaene, that contains nine double bonds. Xanthomonas campestris produced the greatest number of distinct olefin products, 15 compounds ranging in length from C28 to C31 and containing one to three double bonds. The type of long-chain product formed was shown to be dependent on the oleA gene in experiments with Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 ole gene deletion mutants containing native or heterologous oleA genes expressed in trans. A strain deleted in oleABCD and containing oleA in trans produced only ketones. Based on these observations, it was proposed that OleA catalyzes a nondecarboxylative thiolytic condensation of fatty acyl chains to generate a β-ketoacyl intermediate that can decarboxylate spontaneously to generate ketones.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Structure, Function, and Insights into the Biosynthesis of a Head-to-Head Hydrocarbon in Shewanella oneidensis Strain MR-1

David J. Sukovich; Jennifer L. Seffernick; Jack E. Richman; Kristopher A. Hunt; Jeffrey A. Gralnick; Lawrence P. Wackett

ABSTRACT A polyolefinic hydrocarbon was found in nonpolar extracts of Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 and identified as 3,6,9,12,15,19,22,25,28-hentriacontanonaene (compound I) by mass spectrometry, chemical modification, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Compound I was shown to be the product of a head-to-head fatty acid condensation biosynthetic pathway dependent on genes denoted as ole (for olefin biosynthesis). Four ole genes were present in S. oneidensis MR-1. Deletion of the entire oleABCD gene cluster led to the complete absence of nonpolar extractable products. Deletion of the oleC gene alone generated a strain that lacked compound I but produced a structurally analogous ketone. Complementation of the oleC gene eliminated formation of the ketone and restored the biosynthesis of compound I. A recombinant S. oneidensis strain containing oleA from Stenotrophomonas maltophilia strain R551-3 produced at least 17 related long-chain compounds in addition to compound I, 13 of which were identified as ketones. A potential role for OleA in head-to-head condensation was proposed. It was further proposed that long-chain polyunsaturated compounds aid in adapting cells to a rapid drop in temperature, based on three observations. In S. oneidensis wild-type cells, the cellular concentration of polyunsaturated compounds increased significantly with decreasing growth temperature. Second, the oleABCD deletion strain showed a significantly longer lag phase than the wild-type strain when shifted to a lower temperature. Lastly, compound I has been identified in a significant number of bacteria isolated from cold environments.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Purification and characterization of OleA from Xanthomonas campestris and demonstration of a non-decarboxylative Claisen condensation reaction

Janice A. Frias; Jack E. Richman; Jasmine S. Erickson; Lawrence P. Wackett

OleA catalyzes the condensation of fatty acyl groups in the first step of bacterial long-chain olefin biosynthesis, but the mechanism of the condensation reaction is controversial. In this study, OleA from Xanthomonas campestris was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. The purified protein was shown to be active with fatty acyl-CoA substrates that ranged from C8 to C16 in length. With limiting myristoyl-CoA (C14), 1 mol of the free coenzyme A was released/mol of myristoyl-CoA consumed. Using [14C]myristoyl-CoA, the other products were identified as myristic acid, 2-myristoylmyristic acid, and 14-heptacosanone. 2-Myristoylmyristic acid was indicated to be the physiologically relevant product of OleA in several ways. First, 2-myristoylmyristic acid was the major condensed product in short incubations, but over time, it decreased with the concomitant increase of 14-heptacosanone. Second, synthetic 2-myristoylmyristic acid showed similar decarboxylation kinetics in the absence of OleA. Third, 2-myristoylmyristic acid was shown to be reactive with purified OleC and OleD to generate the olefin 14-heptacosene, a product seen in previous in vivo studies. The decarboxylation product, 14-heptacosanone, did not react with OleC and OleD to produce any demonstrable product. Substantial hydrolysis of fatty acyl-CoA substrates to the corresponding fatty acids was observed, but it is currently unclear if this occurs in vivo. In total, these data are consistent with OleA catalyzing a non-decarboxylative Claisen condensation reaction in the first step of the olefin biosynthetic pathway previously found to be present in at least 70 different bacterial strains.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2012

Defining Sequence Space and Reaction Products within the Cyanuric Acid Hydrolase (AtzD)/Barbiturase Protein Family

Jennifer L. Seffernick; Jasmine S. Erickson; Stephan M. Cameron; Seunghee Cho; Anthony G. Dodge; Jack E. Richman; Michael J. Sadowsky; Lawrence P. Wackett

Cyanuric acid hydrolases (AtzD) and barbiturases are homologous, found almost exclusively in bacteria, and comprise a rare protein family with no discernible linkage to other protein families or an X-ray structural class. There has been confusion in the literature and in genome projects regarding the reaction products, the assignment of individual sequences as either cyanuric acid hydrolases or barbiturases, and spurious connection of this family to another protein family. The present study has addressed those issues. First, the published enzyme reaction products of cyanuric acid hydrolase are incorrectly identified as biuret and carbon dioxide. The current study employed (13)C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and mass spectrometry to show that cyanuric acid hydrolase releases carboxybiuret, which spontaneously decarboxylates to biuret. This is significant because it revealed that homologous cyanuric acid hydrolases and barbiturases catalyze completely analogous reactions. Second, enzymes that had been annotated incorrectly in genome projects have been reassigned here by bioinformatics, gene cloning, and protein characterization studies. Third, the AtzD/barbiturase family has previously been suggested to consist of members of the amidohydrolase superfamily, a large class of metallohydrolases. Bioinformatics and the lack of bound metals both argue against a connection to the amidohydrolase superfamily. Lastly, steady-state kinetic measurements and observations of protein stability suggested that the AtzD/barbiturase family might be an undistinguished protein family that has undergone some resurgence with the recent introduction of industrial s-triazine compounds such as atrazine and melamine into the environment.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009

C29 Olefinic Hydrocarbons Biosynthesized by Arthrobacter Species

Janice A. Frias; Jack E. Richman; Lawrence P. Wackett

ABSTRACT Arthrobacter aurescens TC1, Arthrobacter chlorophenolicus A6, Arthrobacter crystallopoietes, and Arthrobacter oxydans produce long-chain monoalkenes, predominantly cis-3,25-dimethyl-13-heptacosene. Four other Arthrobacter strains did not form alkenes. The level of cis-3,25-dimethyl-13-heptacosene in Arthrobacter chlorophenolicus A6 remained proportional to cell mass during growth. cis-3,25-Dimethyl-13-heptacosene did not support growth of A. chlorophenolicus A6.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Metabolism of Thioamides by Ralstonia pickettii TA

Anthony G. Dodge; Jack E. Richman; Gilbert Johnson; Lawrence P. Wackett

ABSTRACT Information on bacterial thioamide metabolism has focused on transformation of the antituberculosis drug ethionamide and related compounds by Mycobacterium tuberculosis. To study this metabolism more generally, a bacterium that grew using thioacetamide as the sole nitrogen source was isolated via enrichment culture. The bacterium was identified as Ralstonia pickettii and designated strain TA. Cells grown on thioacetamide also transformed other thioamide compounds. Transformation of the thioamides tested was dependent on oxygen. During thioamide degradation, sulfur was detected in the medium at the oxidation level of sulfite, further suggesting an oxygenase mechanism. R. pickettii TA did not grow on thiobenzamide as a nitrogen source, but resting cells converted thiobenzamide to benzamide, with thiobenzamide S-oxide and benzonitrile detected as intermediates. Thioacetamide S-oxide was detected as an intermediate during thioacetamide degradation, but the only accumulating metabolite of thioacetamide was identified as 3,5-dimethyl-1,2,4-thiadiazole, a compound shown to derive from spontaneous reaction of thioacetamide and oxygenated thioacetamide species. This dead-end metabolite accounted for only ca. 12% of the metabolized thioacetamide. Neither acetonitrile nor acetamide was detected during thioacetamide degradation, but R. pickettii grew on both compounds as nitrogen and carbon sources. It is proposed that R. pickettii TA degrades thioamides via a mechanism involving consecutive oxygenations of the thioamide sulfur atom.


Tetrahedron | 1974

1,4,7,10-tetraazatetracyclo[5.5.1.04,13.010,13]tridecane: Degenerate rearrangement of its conjugate acid

Jack E. Richman; Howard E. Simmons

Abstract The highly symmetrical 1,4,7,10-tetraazatetracyclo[5.5.1.0 4,13 .0 10,13 ]tridecane ( 1 ) has been synthesized by two methods. The proton NMR spectrum of 1 is analyzed. The cyclic tetraaminomethane derivative undergoes a remarkable series of degenerate prototropic and conformational equilibria. The temperature dependence of the proton NMR spectra of 1 and its conjugate acid 3 are interpreted in terms of a large rate enhancement of intramolecular nucleophilic addition to guanidinium ion 3 (ring-chain tautomerism) compared to its acyclic counterpart.


Biochemistry | 2017

β-Lactone Synthetase Found in the Olefin Biosynthesis Pathway.

James K. Christenson; Jack E. Richman; Matthew R. Jensen; Jennifer Y. Neufeld; Carrie M. Wilmot; Lawrence P. Wackett

The first β-lactone synthetase enzyme is reported, creating an unexpected link between the biosynthesis of olefinic hydrocarbons and highly functionalized natural products. The enzyme OleC, involved in the microbial biosynthesis of long-chain olefinic hydrocarbons, reacts with syn- and anti-β-hydroxy acid substrates to yield cis- and trans-β-lactones, respectively. Protein sequence comparisons reveal that enzymes homologous to OleC are encoded in natural product gene clusters that generate β-lactone rings, suggesting a common mechanism of biosynthesis.


Biochemistry | 2017

OleB from Bacterial Hydrocarbon Biosynthesis Is a β-Lactone Decarboxylase That Shares Key Features with Haloalkane Dehalogenases

James K. Christenson; Serina L. Robinson; Tiffany A Engel; Jack E. Richman; An N Kim; Lawrence P. Wackett

OleB is an α/β-hydrolase found in bacteria that biosynthesize long-chain olefinic hydrocarbons, but its function has remained obscure. We report that OleB from the Gram-negative bacterium Xanthomonas campestris performs an unprecedented β-lactone decarboxylation reaction, to complete cis-olefin biosynthesis. OleB reactions monitored by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy revealed a selectivity for decarboxylating cis-β-lactones and no discernible activity with trans-β-lactones, consistent with the known configuration of pathway intermediates. Protein sequence analyses showed OleB proteins were most related to haloalkane dehalogenases (HLDs) and retained the canonical Asp-His-Asp catalytic triad of HLDs. Unexpectedly, it was determined that an understudied subfamily, denoted as HLD-III, is comprised mostly of OleB proteins encoded within oleABCD gene clusters, suggesting a misannotation. OleB from X. campestris showed very low dehalogenase activity only against haloalkane substrates with long alkyl chains. A haloalkane substrate mimic alkylated wild-type X. campestris OleB but not OleBD114A, implicating this residue as the active site nucleophile as in HLDs. A sequence-divergent OleB, found as part of a natural OleBC fusion and classified as an HLD-III, from the Gram-positive bacterium Micrococcus luteus was demonstrated to have the same activity, stereochemical preference, and dependence on the proposed Asp nucleophile. H218O studies with M. luteus OleBC suggested that the canonical alkyl-enzyme intermediate of HLDs is hydrolyzed differently by OleB enzymes, as 18O is not incorporated into the nucleophilic aspartic acid. This work defines a previously unrecognized reaction in nature, functionally identifies some HLD-III enzymes as β-lactone decarboxylases, and posits an enzymatic mechanism of β-lactone decarboxylation.


Journal of Molecular Structure-theochem | 1998

Ab initio study of the molecular structure and spectroscopic properties of tetraazatetracyclotridecane and tetrakis(dimethylamino)methane

V. Galasso; D. Jones; Jack E. Richman

Abstract The equilibrium structures of 1,4,7,10-tetraazatetracyclo[5.5.1.0 4,13 .0 10,13 ]tridecane and tetrakis(dimethylamino)methane were calculated at the HF/6–31G ∗∗ ab initio level of theory and found to show a spiro-connection of two U- and W-shaped arrangements of the nitrogen lone pairs with D 2 and D 2d symmetry, respectively. The NMR 1 H and 13 C chemical shifts have been analyzed with ab initio continuous set of gauge transformations (CSGT) calculations performed with the B3LYP/6–311 + G(2d,p) hybrid functional model. The He(I) photoelectron spectra were measured and interpreted by means of ab initio outer valence Green function (OVGF) calculations, which give an overall consistent reproduction of the energies and splittings of the n(N) bands.

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Robert R. Holmes

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Roberta O. Day

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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