Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where James B. McAlpine is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by James B. McAlpine.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2014

Universal Quantitative NMR Analysis of Complex Natural Samples

Charlotte Simmler; José G. Napolitano; James B. McAlpine; Shao Nong Chen; Guido F. Pauli

Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) is a universal and quantitative analytical technique. Being a unique structural tool, NMR also competes with metrological techniques for purity determination and reference material analysis. In pharmaceutical research, applications of quantitative NMR (qNMR) cover mostly the identification and quantification of drug and biological metabolites. Offering an unbiased view of the sample composition, and the possibility to simultaneously quantify multiple compounds, qNMR has become the method of choice for metabolomic studies and quality control of complex natural samples such as foods, plants or herbal remedies, and biofluids. In this regard, NMR-based metabolomic studies, dedicated to both the characterization of herbal remedies and clinical diagnosis, have increased considerably.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Molecular Basis for Chloronium-mediated Meroterpene Cyclization CLONING, SEQUENCING, AND HETEROLOGOUS EXPRESSION OF THE NAPYRADIOMYCIN BIOSYNTHETIC GENE CLUSTER

Jaclyn M. Winter; Michelle C. Moffitt; Emmanuel Zazopoulos; James B. McAlpine; Pieter C. Dorrestein; Bradley S. Moore

Structural inspection of the bacterial meroterpenoid antibiotics belonging to the napyradiomycin family of chlorinated dihydroquinones suggests that the biosynthetic cyclization of their terpenoid subunits is initiated via a chloronium ion. The vanadium-dependent haloperoxidases that catalyze such reactions are distributed in fungi and marine algae and have yet to be characterized from bacteria. The cloning and sequence analysis of the 43-kb napyradiomycin biosynthetic cluster (nap) from Streptomyces aculeolatus NRRL 18422 and from the undescribed marine sediment-derived Streptomyces sp. CNQ-525 revealed 33 open reading frames, three of which putatively encode vanadium-dependent chloroperoxidases. Heterologous expression of the CNQ-525-based nap biosynthetic cluster in Streptomyces albus produced at least seven napyradiomycins, including the new analog 2-deschloro-2-hydroxy-A80915C. These data not only revealed the molecular basis behind the biosynthesis of these novel meroterpenoid natural products but also resulted in the first in vivo verification of vanadium-dependent haloperoxidases.


International Journal of Immunopharmacology | 1995

Isolation, purification, and characterization of immunosuppressive compounds from tripterygium: Triptolide and tripdiolide

Wen Zhen Gu; Randal H. Chen; Sydney R. Brandwein; James B. McAlpine; Neal S. Burres

Crude extracts derived from the root of Tripterygium wilfordii Hook f (TWHf) have previously been demonstrated to have immunosuppressive properties and have been used as anti-rheumatic therapy in Chinese traditional medicine. Although these extracts contain a large number of chemical components, the precise nature of the compound(s) responsible for this therapeutic effect has not been established with certainty. An aqueous extract of TWHf was resolved into chemical components by medium-pressure and high-performance liquid chromatography. Immunosuppressive fractions were identified with a mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR) and chemically characterized by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. Two major peaks of immunosuppressive activity were identified. These were the closely related diterpenoid triepoxides, triptolide and tripdiolide. No other immunosuppressive compounds were identified using MLR as the biologic screening assay. Triptolide and tripdiolide may be responsible for the anti-rheumatic properties of crude aqueous extracts of TWHf and represent a novel class of immunosuppressive drugs with potential clinical utility.


Journal of Natural Products | 2015

Countercurrent Separation of Natural Products: An Update

J. Brent Friesen; James B. McAlpine; Shao Nong Chen; Guido F. Pauli

This work assesses the current instrumentation, method development, and applications in countercurrent chromatography (CCC) and centrifugal partition chromatography (CPC), collectively referred to as countercurrent separation (CCS). The article provides a critical review of the CCS literature from 2007 since our last review (J. Nat. Prod.2008, 71, 1489–1508), with a special emphasis on the applications of CCS in natural products research. The current state of CCS is reviewed in regard to three continuing topics (instrumentation, solvent system development, theory) and three new topics (optimization of parameters, workflow, bioactivity applications). The goals of this review are to deliver the necessary background with references for an up-to-date perspective of CCS, to point out its potential for the natural product scientist, and thereby to induce new applications in natural product chemistry, metabolome, and drug discovery research involving organisms from terrestrial and marine sources.


The Journal of Antibiotics | 2006

Genomic Analyses Lead to Novel Secondary Metabolites Part 3 † ECO-0501, a Novel Antibacterial of a New Class

Arjun H. Banskota; James B. McAlpine; Dan Sørensen; Ashraf Ibrahim; Mustapha Aouidate; Mahmood Piraee; Anne Marie Alarco; Chris M. Farnet; Emmanuel Zazopoulos

Genomic analyses of Amycolatopsis orientalis ATCC 43491 strain, deposited as a vancomycin producer, revealed the presence of genetic loci for the production of at least 10 secondary metabolites other than vancomycin. One of these gene clusters, which contained a type I polyketide synthase, was predicted to direct the synthesis of novel class of compound, a glycosidic polyketide ECO-0501 (1). Screening of culture extracts for a compound with the predicted physicochemical properties of the product from this locus, led to the isolation of the 13-O-glucuronide of 13-hydroxy-2,12,14,16,22-pentamethyl-28-(N-methyl-guanidino)-octacosa-2,4,6,8,10,14,20,24-octaenoic acid (2-hydroxy-5-oxo-cyclopent-1-enyl)-amide (ECO-0501, 1). The structure, confirmed by spectral analyses including MS, and 1D and 2D NMR experiments, were in accord with that predicted by genomic analyses. ECO-0501 possessed strong antibacterial activity against a series of Gram-positive pathogens including several strains of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and vancomycin-resistant Enterococci (VRE). ECO-0501 was chemically modified by esterification (1a~1c), N-acetylation (1d) and hydrogenation (1e) in order to explore structure activity relationships (SAR).


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Importance of Purity Evaluation and the Potential of Quantitative 1H NMR as a Purity Assay

Guido F. Pauli; Shao Nong Chen; Charlotte Simmler; David C. Lankin; Tanja Gödecke; Birgit U. Jaki; J. Brent Friesen; James B. McAlpine; José G. Napolitano

In any biomedical and chemical context, a truthful description of chemical constitution requires coverage of both structure and purity. This qualification affects all drug molecules, regardless of development stage (early discovery to approved drug) and source (natural product or synthetic). Purity assessment is particularly critical in discovery programs and whenever chemistry is linked with biological and/or therapeutic outcome. Compared with chromatography and elemental analysis, quantitative NMR (qNMR) uses nearly universal detection and provides a versatile and orthogonal means of purity evaluation. Absolute qNMR with flexible calibration captures analytes that frequently escape detection (water, sorbents). Widely accepted structural NMR workflows require minimal or no adjustments to become practical 1H qNMR (qHNMR) procedures with simultaneous qualitative and (absolute) quantitative capability. This study reviews underlying concepts, provides a framework for standard qHNMR purity assays, and shows how adequate accuracy and precision are achieved for the intended use of the material.


Dental Materials | 2014

Dentin biomodification: strategies, renewable resources and clinical applications.

A.K. Bedran-Russo; Guido F. Pauli; Shao Nong Chen; James B. McAlpine; Carina Strano Castellan; Rs Phansalkar; Thaiane Rodrigues Aguiar; C.M.P. Vidal; José G. Napotilano; Joo Won Nam; Ariene A. Leme

OBJECTIVES The biomodification of dentin is a biomimetic approach, mediated by bioactive agents, to enhance and reinforce the dentin by locally altering the biochemistry and biomechanical properties. This review provides an overview of key dentin matrix components, targeting effects of biomodification strategies, the chemistry of renewable natural sources, and current research on their potential clinical applications. METHODS The PubMed database and collected literature were used as a resource for peer-reviewed articles to highlight the topics of dentin hierarchical structure, biomodification agents, and laboratorial investigations of their clinical applications. In addition, new data is presented on laboratorial methods for the standardization of proanthocyanidin-rich preparations as a renewable source of plant-derived biomodification agents. RESULTS Biomodification agents can be categorized as physical methods and chemical agents. Synthetic and naturally occurring chemical strategies present distinctive mechanism of interaction with the tissue. Initially thought to be driven only by inter- or intra-molecular collagen induced non-enzymatic cross-linking, multiple interactions with other dentin components are fundamental for the long-term biomechanics and biostability of the tissue. Oligomeric proanthocyanidins show promising bioactivity, and their chemical complexity requires systematic evaluation of the active compounds to produce a fully standardized intervention material from renewable resource, prior to their detailed clinical evaluation. SIGNIFICANCE Understanding the hierarchical structure of dentin and the targeting effect of the bioactive compounds will establish their use in both dentin-biomaterials interface and caries management.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2013

HiFSA Fingerprinting Applied to Isomers with Near-Identical NMR Spectra: The Silybin/Isosilybin Case

José G. Napolitano; David C. Lankin; Tyler N. Graf; J. Brent Friesen; Shao Nong Chen; James B. McAlpine; Nicholas H. Oberlies; Guido F. Pauli

This study demonstrates how regio- and diastereo-isomers with near-identical NMR spectra can be distinguished and unambiguously assigned using quantum mechanical driven (1)H iterative Full Spin Analysis (HiFSA). The method is illustrated with four natural products, the flavonolignans silybin A, silybin B, isosilybin A, and isosilybin B, which exhibit extremely similar coupling patterns and chemical shift differences well below the commonly reported level of accuracy of 0.01 ppm. The HiFSA approach generated highly reproducible (1)H NMR fingerprints that enable distinction of all four isomers at (1)H frequencies from 300 to 900 MHz. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that the underlying numeric (1)H NMR profiles, combined with iterative computational analysis, allow parallel quantification of all four isomers, even in difficult to characterize reference materials and mixtures. The results shed new light on the historical challenges to the qualitative and quantitative analysis of these therapeutically relevant flavonolignans and open new opportunities to explore hidden diversity in the chemical space of organic molecules.


The Journal of Antibiotics | 2006

Isolation and Identification of Three New 5-Alkenyl-3,3(2H)-furanones from Two Streptomyces species using a Genomic Screening Approach

Arjun H. Banskota; James B. McAlpine; Dan Sørensen; Mustapha Aouidate; Mahmood Piraee; Anne Marie Alarco; Satoshi Omura; Kazuro Shiomi; Chris M. Farnet; Emmanuel Zazopoulos

Analyses of biosynthetic gene clusters derived from Streptomyces aculeolatus NRRL 18422 and Streptomyces sp. Eco86 indicated that both microorganisms have similar type I polyketide synthase (PKS) gene clusters with relatively few genes encoding post-PKS elaborative enzymes. However both gene clusters included a sequence coding for a relatively uncommon oxidative enzyme related to Baeyer-Villiger, flavin-type monooxygenases. Screening of culture extracts for compounds with the predicted physicochemical properties of the end products from these loci, led to the isolation of three 5-alkenyl-3,3(2H)-furanones, one (E-837, 1) from the former and two (E-492, 2, E-975, 3) from the latter strain. The structures, confirmed by spectral analyses including MS, and 1D and 2D NMR experiments, were in accord with those predicted by genomic analyses. Baeyer-Villiger type oxidation is postulated to be involved in the formation of the furanone moieties in these molecules. All three new compounds were tested for their electron transport inhibitory activities. They had IC50 values of 1∼4 µg/ml against Ascaris suum NADH-fumarate reductase and 1∼12 µg/ml against bovine heart NADH oxidase.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Can Invalid Bioactives Undermine Natural Product-Based Drug Discovery?

Jonathan Bisson; James B. McAlpine; J. Brent Friesen; Shao Nong Chen; James G. Graham; Guido F. Pauli

High-throughput biology has contributed a wealth of data on chemicals, including natural products (NPs). Recently, attention was drawn to certain, predominantly synthetic, compounds that are responsible for disproportionate percentages of hits but are false actives. Spurious bioassay interference led to their designation as pan-assay interference compounds (PAINS). NPs lack comparable scrutiny, which this study aims to rectify. Systematic mining of 80+ years of the phytochemistry and biology literature, using the NAPRALERT database, revealed that only 39 compounds represent the NPs most reported by occurrence, activity, and distinct activity. Over 50% are not explained by phenomena known for synthetic libraries, and all had manifold ascribed bioactivities, designating them as invalid metabolic panaceas (IMPs). Cumulative distributions of ∼200,000 NPs uncovered that NP research follows power-law characteristics typical for behavioral phenomena. Projection into occurrence–bioactivity–effort space produces the hyperbolic black hole of NPs, where IMPs populate the high-effort base.

Collaboration


Dive into the James B. McAlpine's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Guido F. Pauli

University of Illinois at Chicago

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shao Nong Chen

University of Illinois at Chicago

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David C. Lankin

University of Illinois at Chicago

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

José G. Napolitano

University of Illinois at Chicago

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Birgit U. Jaki

University of Illinois at Chicago

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rs Phansalkar

University of Illinois at Chicago

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge