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Dive into the research topics where Kevin R. Beauchesne is active.

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Featured researches published by Kevin R. Beauchesne.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2011

Identification of trichotoxin, a novel chlorinated compound associated with the bloom forming Cyanobacterium, Trichodesmium thiebautii.

Tracey B. Schock; Kevin Huncik; Kevin R. Beauchesne; Tracy A. Villareal; Peter D. R. Moeller

Trichodesmium is a suspected toxin-producing nonheterocystous cyanobacteria ubiquitous in tropical, subtropical, and temperate seas. The genus is known for its ability to fix nitrogen and form massive blooms. In oligotrophic seas, it can dominate the biomass and be a major component of oceanic primary production and global nitrogen cycling. Numerous reports suggest Trichodesmium-derived toxins are a cause of death of fish, crabs, and bivalves. Laboratory studies have demonstrated neurotoxic effects in T. thiebautii cell extracts and field reports suggest respiratory distress and contact dermatitis of humans at collection sites. However, Trichodesmium toxins have not been identified and characterized. Here, we report the extraction of a lipophilic toxin from field-collected T. thiebautii using a purification method of several chromatographic techniques, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), mass spectroscopy (MS), and Fourier transformed-infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR). Trichotoxin has a molecular formula of C(20)H(27)ClO and a mass of 318 m/z and possesses cytotoxic activity against GH(4)C(1) rat pituitary and Neuro-2a mouse neuroblastoma cells. A detection method using liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) was developed. This compound is the first reported cytotoxic natural product isolated and fully characterized from a Trichodesmium species.


PeerJ | 2016

The role of 2,4-dihydroxyquinoline (DHQ) in Pseudomonas aeruginosa pathogenicity.

Jordon D. Gruber; Wei Chen; Stuart Parnham; Kevin R. Beauchesne; Peter D. R. Moeller; Patrick A. Flume; Yong-Mei Zhang

Bacteria synchronize group behaviors using quorum sensing, which is advantageous during an infection to thwart immune cell attack and resist deleterious changes in the environment. In Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the Pseudomonas quinolone signal (Pqs) quorum-sensing system is an important component of an interconnected intercellular communication network. Two alkylquinolones, 2-heptyl-4-quinolone (HHQ) and 2-heptyl-3-hydroxy-4-quinolone (PQS), activate transcriptional regulator PqsR to promote the production of quinolone signals and virulence factors. Our work focused on the most abundant quinolone produced from the Pqs system, 2,4-dihydroxyquinoline (DHQ), which was shown previously to sustain pyocyanin production and antifungal activity of P. aeruginosa. However, little is known about how DHQ affects P. aeruginosa pathogenicity. Using C. elegans as a model for P. aeruginosa infection, we found pqs mutants only able to produce DHQ maintained virulence towards the nematodes similar to wild-type. In addition, DHQ-only producing mutants displayed increased colonization of C. elegans and virulence factor production compared to a quinolone-null strain. DHQ also bound to PqsR and activated the transcription of pqs operon. More importantly, high extracellular concentration of DHQ was maintained in both aerobic and anaerobic growth. High levels of DHQ were also detected in the sputum samples of cystic fibrosis patients. Taken together, our findings suggest DHQ may play an important role in sustaining P. aeruginosa pathogenicity under oxygen-limiting conditions.


Marine Drugs | 2014

Augmenting Anti-Cancer Natural Products with a Small Molecule Adjuvant

Paul G. Wahome; Kevin R. Beauchesne; Anna C. Pedone; John Cavanagh; Christian Melander; Paul V. Zimba; Peter D. R. Moeller

Aquatic microbes produce diverse secondary metabolites with interesting biological activities. Cytotoxic metabolites have the potential to become lead compounds or drugs for cancer treatment. Many cytotoxic compounds, however, show undesirable toxicity at higher concentrations. Such undesirable activity may be reduced or eliminated by using lower doses of the cytotoxic compound in combination with another compound that modulates its activity. Here, we have examined the cytotoxicity of four microbial metabolites [ethyl N-(2-phenethyl) carbamate (NP-1), Euglenophycin, Anabaenopeptin, and Glycolipid 652] using three in vitro cell lines [human breast cancer cells (MCF-7), mouse neuroblastoma cells (N2a), and rat pituitary epithelial cells (GH4C1)]. The compounds showed variable cytotoxicity, with Euglenophycin displaying specificity for N2a cells. We have also examined the modulatory power of NP-1 on the cytotoxicity of the other three compounds and found that at a permissible concentration (125 µg/mL), NP-1 sensitized N2a and MCF-7 cells to Euglenophycin and Glycolipid 652 induced cytotoxicity.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Aflatoxin-Exposure of Vibrio gazogenes as a Novel System for the Generation of Aflatoxin Synthesis Inhibitors.

Phani M. Gummadidala; Yung Pin Chen; Kevin R. Beauchesne; Kristen P. Miller; Chandrani Mitra; Nora Banaszek; Michelle Velez-Martinez; Peter D. R. Moeller; John L. Ferry; Alan W. Decho; Anindya Chanda

Aflatoxin is a mycotoxin and a secondary metabolite, and the most potent known liver carcinogen that contaminates several important crops, and represents a significant threat to public health and the economy. Available approaches reported thus far have been insufficient to eliminate this threat, and therefore provide the rational to explore novel methods for preventing aflatoxin accumulation in the environment. Many terrestrial plants and microbes that share ecological niches and encounter the aflatoxin producers have the ability to synthesize compounds that inhibit aflatoxin synthesis. However, reports of natural aflatoxin inhibitors from marine ecosystem components that do not share ecological niches with the aflatoxin producers are rare. Here, we show that a non-pathogenic marine bacterium, Vibrio gazogenes, when exposed to low non-toxic doses of aflatoxin B1, demonstrates a shift in its metabolic output and synthesizes a metabolite fraction that inhibits aflatoxin synthesis without affecting hyphal growth in the model aflatoxin producer, Aspergillus parasiticus. The molecular mass of the predominant metabolite in this fraction was also different from the known prodigiosins, which are the known antifungal secondary metabolites synthesized by this Vibrio. Gene expression analyses using RT-PCR demonstrate that this metabolite fraction inhibits aflatoxin synthesis by down-regulating the expression of early-, middle-, and late- growth stage aflatoxin genes, the aflatoxin pathway regulator, aflR and one global regulator of secondary metabolism, laeA. Our study establishes a novel system for generation of aflatoxin synthesis inhibitors, and emphasizes the potential of the under-explored Vibrio’s silent genome for generating new modulators of fungal secondary metabolism.


Journal of Natural Products | 2018

Microcystins Containing Doubly Homologated Tyrosine Residues from a Microcystis aeruginosa Bloom: Structures and Cytotoxicity

Haiyin He; ShiBiao Wu; Paul G. Wahome; Matthew J. Bertin; Anna C. Pedone; Kevin R. Beauchesne; Peter D. R. Moeller; Guy T. Carter

Four new microcystin congeners are described including the first three examples of microcystins containing the rare doubly homologated tyrosine residue 2-amino-5-(4-hydroxyphenyl)pentanoic acid (Ahppa) (1-4). Large-scale harvesting and biomass processing allowed the isolation of substantial quantities of these compounds, thus enabling complete structure determination by NMR as well as cytotoxicity evaluation against selected cancer cell lines. The new Ahppa-toxins all incorporate Ahppa residues at the 2-position, and one of these also has a second Ahppa at position 4. The two most lipophilic Ahppa-containing microcystins showed 10-fold greater cytotoxic potency against human tumor cell lines (A549 and HCT-116) compared to microcystin-LR (5). The presence of an Ahppa residue in microcystin congeners is difficult to ascertain by MS methods alone, due to the lack of characteristic fragment ions derived from the doubly homologated side chain. Owing to their unexpected cytotoxic potency, the potential impact of the compounds on human health should be further evaluated.


Journal of Natural Products | 2018

Cyanobufalins: Cardioactive Toxins from Cyanobacterial Blooms

Haiyin He; Matthew J. Bertin; ShiBiao Wu; Paul G. Wahome; Kevin R. Beauchesne; Ross O. Youngs; Paul V. Zimba; Peter D. R. Moeller; Josep Saurí; Guy T. Carter

Cyanobufalins A-C (1-3), a new series of cardiotoxic steroids, have been discovered from cyanobacterial blooms in Buckeye Lake and Grand Lake St. Marys in Ohio. Compounds 1-3 contain distinctive structural features, including geminal methyl groups at C-4, a 7,8 double bond, and a C-16 chlorine substituent that distinguish them from plant- or animal-derived congeners. Despite these structural differences, the compounds are qualitatively identical to bufalin in their cytotoxic profiles versus cell lines in tissue culture and cardiac activity, as demonstrated in an impedance-based cellular assay conducted with IPSC-derived cardiomyocytes. Cyanobufalins are nonselectively toxic to human cells in the single-digit nanomolar range and show stimulation of contractility in cardiomyocytes at sub-nanomolar concentrations. The estimated combined concentration of 1-3 in the environment is in the same nanomolar range, and consequently more precise quantitative analyses are recommended along with more detailed cardiotoxicity studies. This is the first time that cardioactive steroid toxins have been found associated with microorganisms in an aquatic environment. Several factors point to a microbial biosynthetic origin for the cyanobufalins.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2007

Metal Complexes and Free Radical Toxins Produced by Pfiesteria piscicida

Peter D. R. Moeller; Kevin R. Beauchesne; Kevin Huncik; William C. Davis; Steven J. Christopher; Pamela J. Riggs-Gelasco; Andrew Gelasco


Harmful Algae | 2006

Production of goniodomin A by the planktonic, chain-forming dinoflagellate Alexandrium monilatum (Howell) balech isolated from the Gulf Coast of the United States

Michelle H. Hsia; Steve L. Morton; Laurinda L. Smith; Kevin R. Beauchesne; Kevin Huncik; Peter D. R. Moeller


Tetrahedron Letters | 2017

Trichothiazole A, a dichlorinated polyketide containing an embedded thiazole isolated from Trichodesmium blooms

Richard S. Belisle; Christopher W. Via; Tracey B. Schock; Tracy A. Villareal; Paul V. Zimba; Kevin R. Beauchesne; Peter D. R. Moeller; Matthew J. Bertin


Tetrahedron Letters | 2017

Trichothiazole A, a dichlorinated polyketide featuring an embedded thiazole isolated from Trichodesmium thiebautii blooms

Tracey B. Schock; Peter D. R. Moeller; Rick Belisle; Christopher W. Via; Tracy A. Villareal; Kevin R. Beauchesne; Matthew J. Bertin; Paul V. Zimba

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Peter D. R. Moeller

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Paul V. Zimba

Agricultural Research Service

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Tracy A. Villareal

University of Texas at Austin

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