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Dive into the research topics where Kelvin H.-C. Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by Kelvin H.-C. Chen.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2003

Production of High-Quality Particulate Methane Monooxygenase in High Yields from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) with a Hollow-Fiber Membrane Bioreactor

Steve S.-F. Yu; Kelvin H.-C. Chen; Mandy Y.-H. Tseng; Yane-Shih Wang; Chiu-Feng Tseng; Yu-Ju Chen; Ded-Shih Huang; Sunney I. Chan

In order to obtain particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO)-enriched membranes from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) with high activity and in high yields, we devised a method to process cell growth in a fermentor adapted with a hollow-fiber bioreactor that allows easy control and quantitative adjustment of the copper ion concentration in NMS medium over the time course of cell culture. This technical improvement in the method for culturing bacterial cells allowed us to study the effects of copper ion concentration in the growth medium on the copper content in the membranes, as well as the specific activity of the enzyme. The optimal copper concentration in the growth medium was found to be 30 to 35 micro M. Under these conditions, the pMMO is highly expressed, accounting for 80% of the total cytoplasmic membrane proteins and having a specific activity as high as 88.9 nmol of propylene oxide/min/mg of protein with NADH as the reductant. The copper stoichiometry is approximately 13 atoms per pMMO molecule. Analysis of other metal contents provided no evidence of zinc, and only traces of iron were present in the pMMO-enriched membranes. Further purification by membrane solubilization in dodecyl beta-D-maltoside followed by fractionation of the protein-detergent complexes according to molecular size by gel filtration chromatography resulted in a good yield of the pMMO-detergent complex and a high level of homogeneity. The pMMO-detergent complex isolated in this way had a molecular mass of 220 kDa and consisted of an alphabetagamma protein monomer encapsulated in a micelle consisting of ca. 240 detergent molecules. The enzyme is a copper protein containing 13.6 mol of copper/mol of pMMO and essentially no iron (ratio of copper to iron, 80:1). Both the detergent-solubilized membranes and the purified pMMO-detergent complex exhibited reasonable, if not excellent, specific activity. Finally, our ability to control the level of expression of the pMMO allowed us to clarify the sensitivity of the enzyme to NADH and duroquinol, the two common reductants used to assay the enzyme.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

The stereospecific hydroxylation of [2,2-2H2]butane and chiral dideuteriobutanes by the particulate methane monooxygenase from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath).

Steve S.-F. Yu; Lo-Ying Wu; Kelvin H.-C. Chen; Wen-I Luo; Ded-Shih Huang; Sunney I. Chan

Experiments on cryptically chiral ethanes have indicated that the particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO) from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) catalyzes the hydroxylation of ethane with total retention of configuration at the carbon center attacked. This result would seem to rule out a radical mechanism for the hydroxylation chemistry, at least as mediated by this enzyme. The interpretation of subsequent experiments on n-propane, n-butane, and n-pentane has been complicated by hydroxylation at both the pro-R and pro-S secondary C–H bonds, where the hydroxylation takes place. It has been suggested that these results merely reflect presentation of both the pro-R and pro-S C–H bonds to the hot “oxygen atom” species generated at the active site, and that the oxo-transfer chemistry, in fact, proceeds concertedly with retention of configuration. In the present work, we have augmented these earlier studies with experiments on [2,2-2H2]butane and designed d,l form chiral dideuteriobutanes. Essentially equal amounts of (2R)-[3,3-2H2]butan-2-ol and (2R)-[2-2H1]butan-2-ol are produced upon hydroxylation of [2,2-2H2]butane. The chemistry is stereospecific with full retention of configuration at the secondary carbon oxidized. In the case of the various chiral deuterated butanes, the extent of configurational inversion has been shown to be negligible for all the chiral butanes examined. Thus, the hydroxylation of butane takes place with full retention of configuration in butane as well as in the case of ethane. These results are interpreted in terms of an oxo-transfer mechanism based on side-on singlet oxene insertion across the C–H bond similar to that previously noted for singlet carbene insertion (Kirmse, W., and Özkir, I. S. (1992) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 114, 7590-7591). Finally, we discuss how even the oxene insertion mechanism, with “spin crossover” in the transition state, could lead to small amounts of radical rearrangement products, if and when such products are observed. A scheme is described that unifies the two extreme mechanistic limits, namely the concerted oxene insertion and the hydrogen abstraction radical rebound mechanism within the same over-arching framework.


Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2012

Bacteriohemerythrin bolsters the activity of the particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO) in Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath)

Kelvin H.-C. Chen; Hsin-Hui Wu; Si-Fu Ke; Ya-Ting Rao; Chia-Ming Tu; Yu-Ping Chen; Kuo-Hsuan Kuei; Ying-Siao Chen; Vincent C.-C. Wang; Wei-Chun Kao; Sunney I. Chan

Recently, a native bacteriohemerythrin (McHr) has been identified in Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath). Both the particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO) and McHr are over-expressed in cells of this bacterium when this strain of methanotroph is cultured and grown under high copper to biomass conditions. It has been suggested that the role of the McHr is to provide a shuttle to transport dioxygen from the cytoplasm of the cell to the intra-cytoplasmic membranes for consumption by the pMMO. Indeed, McHr enhances the activity of the pMMO when pMMO-enriched membranes are used to assay the enzyme activity. We find that McHr can dramatically improve the activity of pMMO toward the epoxidation of propylene to propylene oxide. The maximum activity is observed at a pMMO to McHr concentration ratio of 4:1, where we have obtained specific activities of 103.7nmol propylene oxide/min/mg protein and 122.8nmol propylene oxide/min/mg protein at 45°C when the turnover is driven by NADH and duroquinol, respectively. These results are consistent with the suggestion that the bacterium requires McHr to deliver dioxygen to the pMMO in the intra-cytoplasmic membranes to accomplish efficient catalysis of methane oxidation when the enzyme is over-expressed in the cells.


Dalton Transactions | 2004

Spectroscopic characterization of the oxo-transfer reaction from a bis(μ-oxo)dicopper(III) complex to triphenylphosphine

Svetlana V. Pavlova; Kelvin H.-C. Chen; Sunney I. Chan

The oxygen-atom transfer reaction from the bis(µ-oxo)dicopper(III) complex [CuIII2(µ-O)2(L)2]2+1, where L =N,N,N,N -tetraethylethylenediamine, to PPh3 has been studied by UV-vis, EPR, 1H NMR and Cu K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy in parallel at low temperatures (193 K) and above. Under aerobic conditions (excess dioxygen), 1 reacted with PPh3, giving OPPh3 and a diamagnetic species that has been assigned to an oxo-bridged dicopper(II) complex on the basis of EPR and Cu K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopic data. Isotope-labeling experiments (18O2) established that the oxygen atom incorporated into the triphenylphosphine oxide came from both complex 1 and exogenous dioxygen. Detailed kinetic studies revealed that the process is a third-order reaction; the rate law is first order in both complex 1 and triphenylphosphine, as well as in dioxygen. At temperatures above 233 K, reaction of 1 with PPh3 was accompanied by ligand degradation, leading to oxidative N-dealkylation of one of the ethyl groups. By contrast, when the reaction was performed in the absence of excess dioxygen, negligible substrate (PPh3) oxidation was observed. Instead, highly symmetrical copper complexes with a characteristic isotropic EPR signal at g= 2.11 were formed. These results are discussed in terms of parallel reaction channels that are activated under various conditions of temperature and dioxygen.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Diiridium Bimetallic Complexes Function as a Redox Switch To Directly Split Carbonate into Carbon Monoxide and Oxygen

Tsun-Ren Chen; Fang-Siou Wu; Hsiu-Pen Lee; Kelvin H.-C. Chen

A pair of diiridium bimetallic complexes exhibit a special type of oxidation-reduction reaction that could directly split carbonate into carbon monoxide and molecular oxygen via a low-energy pathway needing no sacrificial reagent. One of the bimetallic complexes, Ir(III)(μ-Cl)2Ir(III), can catch carbonato group from carbonate and reduce it to CO. The second complex, the rare bimetallic complex Ir(IV)(μ-oxo)2Ir(IV), can react with chlorine to release O2 by the oxidation of oxygen ions with synergistic oxidative effect of iridium ions and chlorine atoms. The activation energy needed for the key reaction is quite low (∼20 kJ/mol), which is far less than the dissociation energy of the C═O bond in CO2 (∼750 kJ/mol). These diiridium bimetallic complexes could be applied as a redox switch to split carbonate or combined with well-known processes in the chemical industry to build up a catalytic system to directly split CO2 into CO and O2.


Methods in Enzymology | 2011

Overexpression and Purification of the Particulate Methane Monooxygenase from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath)

Sunney I. Chan; H.-Hoa T. Nguyen; Kelvin H.-C. Chen; Steve S.-F. Yu

The particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO) is a multi-copper enzyme that mediates the facile conversion of methane to methanol in methanotrophic bacteria. As a membrane-bound multi-subunit metalloprotein, the highly active protein has been difficult to isolate and purify to homogeneity for biochemical and biophysical studies. In this chapter, we describe a method to overexpress pMMO with good specific activity in high yields in the intracytoplasmic membranes of the host organism, together with two protocols to isolate and purify the enzyme from pMMO-enriched membranes without loss of the copper cofactors and enzymatic activity.


Biochemistry | 2004

Toward delineating the structure and function of the particulate methane monooxygenase from methanotrophic bacteria.

Sunney I. Chan; Kelvin H.-C. Chen; Steve S.-F. Yu; Chang-Li Chen; Simon S.-J. Kuo


Angewandte Chemie | 2007

Redox Potentiometry Studies of Particulate Methane Monooxygenase: Support for a Trinuclear Copper Cluster Active Site

Sunney I. Chan; Vincent C.-C. Wang; Jeff C.‐H. Lai; Steve S.-F. Yu; Peter P.-Y. Chen; Kelvin H.-C. Chen; Chang-Li Chen; Michael K. Chan


Journal of The Chinese Chemical Society | 2004

The Copper Clusters in the Particulate Methane Monooxygenase (pMMO) from Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath)

Kelvin H.-C. Chen; Chang-Li Chen; Chiu-Fou Tseng; Steve S.-F. Yu; Shyue-Chu Ke; Jyh-Fu Lee; Hiep-Hoa T. Nguyen; Sean J. Elliott; James O. Alben; Sunney I. Chan


Journal of The Chinese Chemical Society | 2004

The Catalytic Copper Clusters of the Particulate Methane Monooxygenase from Methanotrophic Bacteria: Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Spectral Simulations

Shao-Ching Hung; Chang-Li Chen; Kelvin H.-C. Chen; Steve S.-F. Yu; Sunney I. Chan

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Hsiu-Pen Lee

National Pingtung University of Education

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Tsun-Ren Chen

National Pingtung University

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Ded-Shih Huang

National Cheng Kung University

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Jhy-Der Chen

Chung Yuan Christian University

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