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Dive into the research topics where Joshua A. Mancini is active.

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Featured researches published by Joshua A. Mancini.


Chemical Science | 2014

Constructing a man-made c-type cytochrome maquette in vivo: electron transfer, oxygen transport and conversion to a photoactive light harvesting maquette.

J.L. Ross Anderson; Craig T. Armstrong; Goutham Kodali; Bruce R. Lichtenstein; Daniel W. Watkins; Joshua A. Mancini; Aimee L. Boyle; Tammer A. Farid; Matthew P. Crump; Christopher C. Moser; P. Leslie Dutton

The successful use of man-made proteins to advance synthetic biology requires both the fabrication of functional artificial proteins in a living environment, and the ability of these proteins to interact productively with other proteins and substrates in that environment. Proteins made by the maquette method integrate sophisticated oxidoreductase function into evolutionarily naive, non-computationally designed protein constructs with sequences that are entirely unrelated to any natural protein. Nevertheless, we show here that we can efficiently interface with the natural cellular machinery that covalently incorporates heme into natural cytochromes c to produce in vivo an artificial c-type cytochrome maquette. Furthermore, this c-type cytochrome maquette is designed with a displaceable histidine heme ligand that opens to allow functional oxygen binding, the primary event in more sophisticated functions ranging from oxygen storage and transport to catalytic hydroxylation. To exploit the range of functions that comes from the freedom to bind a variety of redox cofactors within a single maquette framework, this c-type cytochrome maquette is designed with a second, non-heme C, tetrapyrrole binding site, enabling the construction of an elementary electron transport chain, and when the heme C iron is replaced with zinc to create a Zn porphyrin, a light-activatable artificial redox protein. The work we describe here represents a major advance in de novo protein design, offering a robust platform for new c-type heme based oxidoreductase designs and an equally important proof-of-principle that cofactor-equipped man-made proteins can be expressed in living cells, paving the way for constructing functionally useful man-made proteins in vivo.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2012

Engineering oxidoreductases: maquette proteins designed from scratch.

Bruce R. Lichtenstein; Tammer A. Farid; Goutham Kodali; Lee A. Solomon; J. L. Ross Anderson; Molly M. Sheehan; Nathan M. Ennist; Bryan A. Fry; Sarah E. Chobot; Chris Bialas; Joshua A. Mancini; Craig T. Armstrong; Zhenyu Zhao; Tatiana V. Esipova; David Snell; Sergei A. Vinogradov; Bohdana M. Discher; Christopher C. Moser; P. Leslie Dutton

The study of natural enzymes is complicated by the fact that only the most recent evolutionary progression can be observed. In particular, natural oxidoreductases stand out as profoundly complex proteins in which the molecular roots of function, structure and biological integration are collectively intertwined and individually obscured. In the present paper, we describe our experimental approach that removes many of these often bewildering complexities to identify in simple terms the necessary and sufficient requirements for oxidoreductase function. Ours is a synthetic biology approach that focuses on from-scratch construction of protein maquettes designed principally to promote or suppress biologically relevant oxidations and reductions. The approach avoids mimicry and divorces the commonly made and almost certainly false ascription of atomistically detailed functionally unique roles to a particular protein primary sequence, to gain a new freedom to explore protein-based enzyme function. Maquette design and construction methods make use of iterative steps, retraceable when necessary, to successfully develop a protein family of sturdy and versatile single-chain three- and four-α-helical structural platforms readily expressible in bacteria. Internally, they prove malleable enough to incorporate in prescribed positions most natural redox cofactors and many more simplified synthetic analogues. External polarity, charge-patterning and chemical linkers direct maquettes to functional assembly in membranes, on nanostructured titania, and to organize on selected planar surfaces and materials. These protein maquettes engage in light harvesting and energy transfer, in photochemical charge separation and electron transfer, in stable dioxygen binding and in simple oxidative chemistry that is the basis of multi-electron oxidative and reductive catalysis.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2017

Multi-step excitation energy transfer engineered in genetic fusions of natural and synthetic light-harvesting proteins

Joshua A. Mancini; Goutham Kodali; Jianbing Jiang; Kanumuri Ramesh Reddy; Jonathan S. Lindsey; Donald A. Bryant; P. Leslie Dutton; Christopher C. Moser

Synthetic proteins designed and constructed from first principles with minimal reference to the sequence of any natural protein have proven robust and extraordinarily adaptable for engineering a range of functions. Here for the first time we describe the expression and genetic fusion of a natural photosynthetic light-harvesting subunit with a synthetic protein designed for light energy capture and multi-step transfer. We demonstrate excitation energy transfer from the bilin of the CpcA subunit (phycocyanin α subunit) of the cyanobacterial photosynthetic light-harvesting phycobilisome to synthetic four-helix-bundle proteins accommodating sites that specifically bind a variety of selected photoactive tetrapyrroles positioned to enhance energy transfer by relay. The examination of combinations of different bilin, chlorin and bacteriochlorin cofactors has led to identification of the preconditions for directing energy from the bilin light-harvesting antenna into synthetic protein–cofactor constructs that can be customized for light-activated chemistry in the cell.


bioRxiv | 2018

Rational construction of compact de novo-designed biliverdin-binding proteins

Molly M. Sheehan; Michael S. Magaraci; I.A. Kuznetsov; Joshua A. Mancini; Goutham Kodali; Christopher C. Moser; P. Leslie Dutton; Brian Y. Chow

We report the rational construction of a de novo-designed biliverdin-binding protein by first principles of protein design, informed by energy minimization modeling in Rosetta. The self-assembling tetrahelical bundles bind biliverdin IXa (BV) cofactor auto-catalytically in vitro, similar to photosensory proteins that bind BV (and related bilins, or linear tetrapyrroles) despite lacking sequence and structural homology to the natural counterparts. Upon identifying a suitable site for cofactor ligation to the protein scaffold, stepwise placement of residues stabilized BV within the hydrophobic core. Rosetta modeling was used in the absence of a high-resolution structure to define the structure-function of the binding pocket. Holoprotein formation indeed stabilized BV, resulting in increased far-red BV fluorescence. By removing segments extraneous to cofactor stabilization or bundle stability, the initial 15-kilodalton de novo-designed fluorescence-activating protein (“dFP”) was truncated without altering its optical properties, down to a miniature 10-kilodalton “mini,” in which the protein scaffold extends only a half-heptad repeat beyond the hypothetical position of the bilin D-ring. This work demonstrates how highly compact holoprotein fluorochromes can be rationally constructed using de novo protein design technology and natural cofactors.


Nanoscale | 2018

A synthetic biological quantum optical system

Anna Lishchuk; Goutham Kodali; Joshua A. Mancini; Matthew Broadbent; Brice Darroch; Olga Mass; Aleksey Nabok; P. Leslie Dutton; C. Neil Hunter; Päivi Törmä; Graham J. Leggett

Strong coupling between plasmon modes and chlorins in synthetic light-harvesting maquette proteins yields hybrid light–matter states (plexcitons) whose energies are controlled by design of protein structure, enabling the creation of new states not seen under weak coupling.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2018

De novo synthetic biliprotein design, assembly and excitation energy transfer

Joshua A. Mancini; Molly M. Sheehan; Goutham Kodali; Brian Y. Chow; Donald A. Bryant; P. Leslie Dutton; Christopher C. Moser

Bilins are linear tetrapyrrole chromophores with a wide range of visible and near-visible light absorption and emission properties. These properties are tuned upon binding to natural proteins and exploited in photosynthetic light-harvesting and non-photosynthetic light-sensitive signalling. These pigmented proteins are now being manipulated to develop fluorescent experimental tools. To engineer the optical properties of bound bilins for specific applications more flexibly, we have used first principles of protein folding to design novel, stable and highly adaptable bilin-binding four-α-helix bundle protein frames, called maquettes, and explored the minimal requirements underlying covalent bilin ligation and conformational restriction responsible for the strong and variable absorption, fluorescence and excitation energy transfer of these proteins. Biliverdin, phycocyanobilin and phycoerythrobilin bind covalently to maquette Cys in vitro. A blue-shifted tripyrrole formed from maquette-bound phycocyanobilin displays a quantum yield of 26%. Although unrelated in fold and sequence to natural phycobiliproteins, bilin lyases nevertheless interact with maquettes during co-expression in Escherichia coli to improve the efficiency of bilin binding and influence bilin structure. Bilins bind in vitro and in vivo to Cys residues placed in loops, towards the amino end or in the middle of helices but bind poorly at the carboxyl end of helices. Bilin-binding efficiency and fluorescence yield are improved by Arg and Asp residues adjacent to the ligating Cys on the same helix and by His residues on adjacent helices.


Archive | 2017

Chapter 1:Making Maquette Models of Bioenergetic Structures

Christopher C. Moser; Nathan M. Ennist; Joshua A. Mancini; P.L. Dutton

A practical understanding of first-principles directed protein folding in de novo protein design and the factors that control intraprotein electron tunnelling in both natural and artificial proteins allows the planned design of artificial counterparts of natural bioenergetic proteins. Such designs allow reverse engineering of natural proteins to separate out protein elements that are important for function from those that are remnants of the legacy of evolution. Furthermore, these practical understandings allow us to go beyond natural protein designs that are dedicated to natural cellular needs, to engineer robust novel electron-transfer systems directed instead towards human needs such as solar energy trapping in renewable fuels.


Chemical Science | 2017

Design and engineering of water-soluble light-harvesting protein maquettes

Goutham Kodali; Joshua A. Mancini; Lee A. Solomon; Tatiana V. Episova; Nicholas Roach; Christopher J. Hobbs; Pawel Wagner; Olga Mass; Kunche Aravindu; Jonathan E. Barnsley; Keith C. Gordon; David L. Officer; P. Leslie Dutton; Christopher C. Moser


Archive | 2017

Maquette Strategy for Creation of Light- and Redox-Active Proteins

Nathan M. Ennist; Joshua A. Mancini; Dirk B. Auman; Chris Bialas; Martin J. Iwanicki; Tatiana V. Esipova; Bohdana M. Discher; Christopher C. Moser; P. Leslie Dutton


Chemical Science | 2014

Constructing a man-made c-type cytochrome maquette in vivo

J L R Anderson; Craig T. Armstrong; Goutham Kodali; Bruce R. Lichtenstein; Daniel W. Watkins; Joshua A. Mancini; Aimee L. Boyle; Tammer A. Farid; Matthew P. Crump; Christopher C. Moser; P. Leslie Dutton

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Goutham Kodali

University of Pennsylvania

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P. Leslie Dutton

University of Pennsylvania

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Molly M. Sheehan

University of Pennsylvania

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Nathan M. Ennist

University of Pennsylvania

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Brian Y. Chow

University of Pennsylvania

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Donald A. Bryant

Pennsylvania State University

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