John S. Blanchard
Yeshiva University
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Featured researches published by John S. Blanchard.
Biochemistry | 2009
Patrick A. Frantom; Hui Min Zhang; Mark R. Emmett; Alan G. Marshall; John S. Blanchard
As it is becoming accepted that allosteric regulation can occur through a change in local conformational equilibria as opposed to a change in overall static structure, a thorough description of the structural aspects of these types of mechanisms will be essential to understanding this fundamental biological process. Here we report the experimental identification of key regions of conformational perturbation in the allosteric network of a large (144 kDa), multidomain enzyme by use of solution-phase hydrogen/deuterium exchange. Large perturbations in the regulatory domain induced by effector molecule binding are linked to a very specific, targeted perturbation in the active site, some 50 A away. Binding of L-leucine to an enzyme variant (Y410F) that is kinetically insensitive to effector binding was shown to elicit similar changes in the regulatory domain, but perturbs an alternate region of the catalytic domain, consistent with the proposed allosteric mechanism. These results comprise one of the first reports of an experimentally mapped allosteric mechanism in a protein of this size and provide necessary information to be used toward the development of allostery-based drugs or enzymes with engineered regulatory properties.
ACS Infectious Diseases | 2015
Sebastian G. Kurz; Saugata Hazra; Christopher R. Bethel; Chiara Romagnoli; Emilia Caselli; Fabio Prati; John S. Blanchard; Robert A. Bonomo
BlaC, the single chromosomally encoded β-lactamase of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, has been identified as a promising target for novel therapies that rely upon β-lactamase inhibition. Boronic acid transition-state inhibitors (BATSIs) are a class of β-lactamase inhibitors which permit rational inhibitor design by combinations of various R1 and R2 side chains. To explore the structural determinants of effective inhibition, we screened a panel of 25 BATSIs to explore key structure-function relationships. We identified a cefoperazone analogue, EC19, which displayed slow, time-dependent inhibition against BlaC with a potency similar to that of clavulanate (Ki* of 0.65 ± 0.05 μM). To further characterize the molecular basis of inhibition, we solved the crystallographic structure of the EC19-BlaC(N172A) complex and expanded our analysis to variant enzymes. The results of this structure-function analysis encourage the design of a novel class of β-lactamase inhibitors, BATSIs, to be used against Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Biochemistry | 2015
Saugata Hazra; Sebastian G. Kurz; Kerstin A. Wolff; Liem Nguyen; Robert A. Bonomo; John S. Blanchard
Mycobacterium tuberculosis is intrinsically resistant to most β-lactam antibiotics because of the constitutive expression of the blaC-encoded β-lactamase. This enzyme has extremely high activity against penicillins and cephalosporins, but weaker activity against carbapenems. The enzyme can be inhibited by clavulanate, avibactam, and boronic acids. In this study, we investigated the ability of 6-methylidene β-lactams to inhibit BlaC. One such compound, penem 2, inhibited BlaC more than 70 times more efficiently than clavulanate. The compound forms a covalent complex with BlaC as shown by mass spectrometry. Crystallization of the complex revealed that the bound inhibitor was covalently attached via the Ser70 active site residue and that the covalently, acylated form of the inhibitor had undergone additional chemistry yielding a 4,7-thiazepine ring in place of the β-lactam and a thiazapyroline ring generated as a result of β-lactam ring opening. The stereochemistry of the product of the 7-endo-trig cyclization was the opposite of that observed previously for class A and D β-lactamases. Addition of penem 2 greatly synergized the antibacterial properties of both ampicillin and meropenem against a growing culture of M. tuberculosis. Strikingly, penem 2 alone showed significant growth inhibition, suggesting that in addition to its capability of efficiently inhibiting BlaC, it also inhibited the peptidoglycan cross-linking transpeptidases.
Methods in Enzymology | 1984
John S. Blanchard
Biochemistry | 2001
Wuxian Shi; Luiz Augusto Basso; Diógenes Santiago Santos; Peter C. Tyler; Richard H. Furneaux; John S. Blanchard; Steven C. Almo; Vern L. Schramm
Biochemistry | 2001
Luiz Augusto Basso; Diógenes Santiago Santos; Wuxian Shi; Richard H. Furneaux; Peter C. Tyler; Vern L. Schramm; John S. Blanchard
Biochemistry | 2003
Argyrides Argyrou; Guangxing Sun; Bruce A. Palfey; John S. Blanchard
Biochemistry | 2010
Alison L. Sikora; Daniel J. Wilson; Courtney C. Aldrich; John S. Blanchard
Biochemistry | 2002
Argyrides Argyrou; John S. Blanchard; Bruce A. Palfey
Biochemistry | 1992
Betty N. Leichus; Mark Bradley; Kari C. Nadeau; Christopher T. Walsh; John S. Blanchard