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Dive into the research topics where James T. Kellis is active.

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Featured researches published by James T. Kellis.


Langmuir | 2011

Interfacial biocatalysis on charged and immobilized substrates: the roles of enzyme and substrate surface charge.

Bob E. Feller; James T. Kellis; Luis G. Cascao-Pereira; Channing R. Robertson; Curtis W. Frank

An enzyme charge ladder was used to examine the role of electrostatic interactions involved in biocatalysis at the solid-liquid interface. The reactive substrate consisted of an immobilized bovine serum albumin (BSA) multilayer prepared using a layer-by-layer technique. The zeta potential of the BSA substrate and each enzyme variant was measured to determine the absolute charge in solution. Enzyme adsorption and the rate of substrate surface hydrolysis were monitored for the enzyme charge ladder series to provide information regarding the strength of the enzyme-substrate interaction and the rate of interfacial biocatalysis. First, each variant of the charge ladder was examined at pH 8 for various solution ionic strengths. We found that for positively charged variants the adsorption increased with the magnitude of the charge until the surface became saturated. For higher ionic strength solutions, a greater positive enzyme charge was required to induce adsorption. Interestingly, the maximum catalytic rate was not achieved at enzyme saturation but at an invariable intermediate level of adsorption for each ionic strength value. Furthermore, the maximum achievable reaction rate for the charge ladder was larger for higher ionic strength values. We propose that diffusion plays an important role in interfacial biocatalysis, and for strong enzyme-substrate interaction, the rate of diffusion is reduced, leading to a decrease in the overall reaction rate. We investigated the effect of substrate charge by varying the solution pH from 6.1 to 8.7 and by examining multiple ionic strength values for each pH. The same intermediate level of adsorption was found to maximize the overall reaction rate. However, the ionic strength response of the maximum achievable rate was clearly dependent on the pH of the experiment. We propose that this observation is not a direct effect of pH but is caused by the change in substrate surface charge induced by changing the pH. To prove this hypothesis, BSA substrates were chemically modified to reduce the magnitude of the negative charge at pH 8. Chemical modification was accomplished by the amidation of aspartic and glutamic acids to asparagine and glutamine. The ionic strength response of the chemically modified substrate was considerably different than that for the native BSA substrate at an identical pH, consistent with the trend based on substrate surface charge. Consequently, for substrates with a low net surface charge, the maximum achievable catalytic rate of the charge ladder was relatively independent of the solution ionic strength over the range examined; however, at high net substrate surface charge, the maximum rate showed a considerable ionic strength dependence.


Langmuir | 2008

Enzymatic Proteolysis of a Surface-Bound α-Helical Polypeptide

Jasper O. Hardesty; Luis G. Cascao-Pereira; James T. Kellis; Channing R. Robertson; Curtis W. Frank

In this work, we studied the interactions of enzymes with model substrate surfaces using label-free techniques. Our model system was based on serine proteases (a class of enzymes that digests proteins) and surface-bound polypeptide substrates. While previous studies have focused on bulk media factors such as pH, ionic strength, and surfactants, this study focuses on the role of the surface-bound substrate itself. In particular, we assess how the substrate density of a polypeptide with an alpha-helical secondary structure influences surface reactivity. An alpha-helical secondary structure was chosen based on literature indicating that stable alpha-helices can resist enzymatic digestion. To investigate the protease resistance of a surface-bound a-helix, we designed an a-helical polypeptide (SS-polypeptide, where SS = disulfide), used it to form films of varying surface coverage and then measured responses of the films to enzymatic exposure. Using quartz-crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D), angle-resolved X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (AR-XPS), grazing-angle infrared spectroscopy (GAIRS), and other techniques, we characterized the degradation of films to determine how the lateral packing density of the surface-bound SS-polypeptide substrate affected surface proteolysis. Characterization of pure SS-polypeptide films indicated dense packing of helices that maintained their helical structure and were generally oriented normal to the surface. We found that films of pure SS-polypeptide significantly resisted enzymatic digestion, while incorporation of very minor amounts of a diluent in such films resulted in rapid digestion. In part, this may be due to the need for the enzyme to bind several peptides along the peptide substrate within the cleft for digestion to occur. Only SS-polypeptide films that were densely packed and did not permit catalytic access to multiple peptides (e.g., terminal peptides only) were resistant to enzymatic proteolysis.


Langmuir | 2010

The role of electrostatic interactions in protease surface diffusion and the consequence for interfacial biocatalysis.

Bob E. Feller; James T. Kellis; Luis G. Cascao-Pereira; Channing R. Robertson; Curtis W. Frank

This study examines the influence of electrostatic interactions on enzyme surface diffusion and the contribution of diffusion to interfacial biocatalysis. Surface diffusion, adsorption, and reaction were investigated on an immobilized bovine serum albumin (BSA) multilayer substrate over a range of solution ionic strength values. Interfacial charge of the enzyme and substrate surface was maintained by performing the measurements at a fixed pH; therefore, electrostatic interactions were manipulated by changing the ionic strength. The interfacial processes were investigated using a combination of techniques: fluorescence recovery after photobleaching, surface plasmon resonance, and surface plasmon fluorescence spectroscopy. We used an enzyme charge ladder with a net charge ranging from -2 to +4 with respect to the parent to systematically probe the contribution of electrostatics in interfacial enzyme biocatalysis on a charged substrate. The correlation between reaction rate and adsorption was determined for each charge variant within the ladder, each of which displayed a maximum rate at an intermediate surface concentration. Both the maximum reaction rate and adsorption value at which this maximum rate occurs increased in magnitude for the more positive variants. In addition, the specific enzyme activity increased as the level of adsorption decreased, and for the lowest adsorption values, the specific enzyme activity was enhanced compared to the trend at higher surface concentrations. At a fixed level of adsorption, the specific enzyme activity increased with positive enzyme charge; however, this effect offers diminishing returns as the enzyme becomes more highly charged. We examined the effect of electrostatic interactions on surface diffusion. As the binding affinity was reduced by increasing the solution ionic strength, thus weakening electrostatic interaction, the rate of surface diffusion increased considerably. The enhancement in specific activity achieved at the lowest adsorption values is explained by the substantial rise in surface diffusion at high ionic strength due to decreased interactions with the surface. Overall, knowledge of the electrostatic interactions can be used to control surface parameters such as surface concentration and surface diffusion, which intimately correlate with surface biocatalysis. We propose that the maximum reaction rate results from a balance between adsorption and surface diffusion. The above finding suggests enzyme engineering and process design strategies for improving interfacial biocatalysis in industrial, pharmaceutical, and food applications.


Langmuir | 2008

Fluorescence quantification for surface plasmon excitation.

Bob E. Feller; James T. Kellis; Luis G. Cascao-Pereira; Wolfgang Knoll; Channing R. Robertson; Curtis W. Frank

Surface plasmon resonance and surface plasmon fluorescence spectroscopy in combination have the potential to distinguish multicomponent surface processes. However, surface intensity variations from resonance angle shifts lead to a nonlinear response in the fluorescence intensity. We report a method to account for surface intensity variations using the experimentally measured relationship between fluorescence and reflectivity. We apply this method to monitor protease adsorption and proteolytic substrate degradation simultaneously. Multilayer protein substrates are prepared for these degradation studies using a layer-by-layer technique.


Archive | 2000

Enzymatic modification of the surface of a polyester fiber or article

James T. Kellis; Ayrookaran J. Poulose; Mee-Young Yoon


Archive | 2000

Enzymes useful for changing the properties of polyester

Wade Dyson; James T. Kellis; Ayrookaran J. Poulose; Mee-Young Yoon


Archive | 1997

High molecular weight trichoderma cellulase

Benjamin S. Bower; Kathleen A. Clarkson; Katherine D. Collier; James T. Kellis; Moira B. Kelly; Edmund A. Larenas


Langmuir | 2002

Surface plasmon resonance/surface plasmon enhanced fluorescence: An optical technique for the detection of multicomponent macromolecular adsorption at the solid/ liquid interface

Shaunak Roy; Joon-h Kim; James T. Kellis; Ayrookaran J. Poulose; and Channing R. Robertson; Alice P. Gast


Archive | 2009

Ts-23 alpha-amylase variants with altered properties

Luis G. Cascao-Pereira; Claudine Chang; Clement Choy; James T. Kellis; Brian E. Jones; Melodie Estabrook; Marc Kolkman; Chris Leeflang; Casper Vroemen; Walter Weyler


Archive | 1998

Multiply-substituted protease variants with altered net charge for use in detergents

Ayrookaran J. Poulose; Volker Schellenberger; James T. Kellis; Christian Paech; Joanne Nadherny; Donald P. Naki; Katherine D. Collier; Robert M. Caldwell

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Alice P. Gast

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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