Lynn Wood
Virginia Commonwealth University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lynn Wood.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2006
Lynn Wood; Dennis E. Ohman
Expression of mucD, encoding a homologue of the HtrA(DegP) family of endoserine proteases, was investigated in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Expressed from the algT-mucABCD operon, MucD was detected in mucoid (FRD1) and nonmucoid (PAO1) parental strains and also when polar insertions were placed upstream in algT or mucB. A transcriptional start site for a mucD promoter (PmucD) was mapped within mucC. Expression of single-copy mucD217, encoding MucD altered in the protease motif (S217A), was defective in temperature resistance and alginate gene regulation.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2008
Andrew J. Leech; April Sprinkle; Lynn Wood; Daniel J. Wozniak; Dennis E. Ohman
Alginate production in mucoid (MucA-defective) Pseudomonas aeruginosa is dependent upon several transcriptional regulators, including AlgB, a two-component response regulator belonging to the NtrC family. This role of AlgB was apparently independent of its sensor kinase, KinB, and even the N-terminal phosphorylation domain of AlgB was dispensable for alginate biosynthetic gene (i.e., algD operon) activation. However, it remained unclear whether AlgB stimulated algD transcription directly or indirectly. In this study, microarray analyses were used to examine a set of potential AlgB-dependent, KinB-independent genes in a PAO1 mucA background that overlapped with genes induced by d-cycloserine, which is known to activate algD expression. This set contained only the algD operon plus one other gene that was shown to be uninvolved in alginate production. This suggested that AlgB promotes alginate production by directly binding to the algD promoter (PalgD). Chromosome immunoprecipitation revealed that AlgB bound in vivo to PalgD but did not bind when AlgB had an R442E substitution that disrupted the DNA binding domain. AlgB also showed binding to PalgD fragments in an electrophoretic mobility shift assay at pH 4.5 but not at pH 8.0. A direct systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment approach showed AlgB binding to a 50-bp fragment located at bp -224 to -274 relative to the start of PalgD transcription. Thus, AlgB belongs to a subclass of NtrC family proteins that can activate promoters which utilize a sigma factor other than sigma(54), in this case to stimulate transcription from the sigma(22)-dependent PalgD promoter.
Biomacromolecules | 2011
Souvik Chakrabarty; Allison King; Pinar Kurt; Wei Zhang; Dennis E. Ohman; Lynn Wood; C. Lovelace; Raj R. Rao; Kenneth J. Wynne
This study focuses on the solution antimicrobial effectiveness of a novel class of copolyoxetanes with quaternary ammonium and PEG-like side chains. A precursor P[(BBOx-m)(ME2Ox)] copolyoxetane was prepared by cationic ring-opening copolymerization of 3-((4-bromobutoxy)methyl)-3-methyloxetane (BBOx) and 3-((2-(2-methoxyethoxy)ethoxy)methyl)-3-methyloxetane (ME2Ox) to give random copolymers with 14-100 (m) mol % BBOx. Reaction of P[(BBOx-m)(ME2Ox)] with dodecyl dimethylamine gave the corresponding quaternary P[(C12-m)(ME2Ox)] polycation salts, designated C12-m, as viscous liquids in 100% yield. BBOx/ME2Ox and C12/ME2Ox ratios were obtained by (1)H NMR spectroscopy. C12-m molecular weights (M(n), 3.5-21.9 kDa) were obtained from (1)H NMR end group analysis. DSC studies up to 150 °C showed only thermal transitions between -69 and -34 °C assigned to T(g) values. Antibacterial activity for the C12-m copolyoxetanes was tested by determining minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) against Gram(+) Staphylococcus aureus and Gram(-) Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa . MIC decreased with increasing C12 mol percent, reaching a minimum in the range C12-43 to C12-60. Overall, the antimicrobial with consistently low MICs for the three tested pathogenic bacteria was C12-43: (bacteria, MIC, μg/mL) E. coli (6), S. aureus (5), and P. aeruginosa (33). For C12-43, minimum biocidal concentration (MBC) to reach 99.99% kill in 24 h required 1.5× MIC for S. aureus and 2× MIC for E. coli and P. aeruginosa . At 5× MIC against a challenge of 10(8) cfu/mL, C12-43 kills ≥99% S. aureus , E. coli , and P. aeruginosa within 1 h. C12-m copolyoxetane cytotoxicity toward human red blood cells was low, indicating good prospects for biocompatibility. The tunability of C12-m copolyoxetane compositions, effective antimicrobial behavior against Gram(+) and Gram(-) bacteria, and promising biocompatibility offer opportunities for further modification and potential applications as therapeutic agents.
Biomacromolecules | 2014
Allison King; Souvik Chakrabarty; Wei Zhang; Xiaomei Zeng; Dennis E. Ohman; Lynn Wood; Sheena Abraham; Raj R. Rao; Kenneth J. Wynne
The alkyl chain length of quaternary ammonium/PEG copolyoxetanes has been varied to discern effects on solution antimicrobial efficacy, hemolytic activity and cytotoxicity. Monomers 3-((4-bromobutoxy)methyl)-3-methyloxetane (BBOx) and 3-((2-(2-methoxyethoxy)ethoxy)methyl)-3-methyloxetane (ME2Ox) were used to prepare precursor P[(BBOx)(ME2Ox)-50:50–4 kDa] copolyoxetane via cationic ring opening polymerization. The 1:1 copolymer composition and Mn (4 kDa) were confirmed by 1H NMR spectroscopy. After C–Br substitution by a series of tertiary amines, ionic liquid Cx-50 copolyoxetanes were obtained, where 50 is the mole percent of quaternary repeat units and “x” is quaternary alkyl chain length (2, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, or 16 carbons). Modulated differential scanning calorimetry (MDSC) studies showed Tgs between −40 and −60 °C and melting endotherms for C14–50 and C16–50. Minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) were determined for Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. A systematic dependence of MIC on alkyl chain length was found. The most effective antimicrobials were in the C6–50 to C12–50 range. C8–50 had better overall performance with MICs of 4 μg/mL, E. coli; 2 μg/mL, S. aureus; and 24 μg/mL, P. aeruginosa. At 5 × MIC, C8–50 effected >99% kill in 1 h against S. aureus, E. coli, and P. aeruginosa challenges of 108 cfu/mL; log reductions (1 h) were 7, 3, and 5, respectively. To provide additional insight into polycation interactions with bacterial membranes, a geometric model based on the dimensions of E. coli is described that provides an estimate of the maximum number of polycations that can chemisorb. Chain dimensions were estimated for polycation C8–50 with a molecular weight of 5 kDa. Considering the approximations for polycation chemisorption (PCC), it is surprising that a calculation based on geometric considerations gives a C8–50 concentration within a factor of 2 of the MIC, 4.0 (±1.2) μg/mL for E. coli. Cx-50 copolyoxetane cytotoxicity was low for human red blood cells, human dermal fibroblasts (HDF), and human foreskin fibroblasts (HFF). Selectivities for bacterial kill over cell lysis were among the highest ever reported for polycations indicating good prospects for biocompatibility.
Chemical Communications | 2009
Zhe-Xue Lu; Lynn Wood; Dennis E. Ohman; Maryanne M. Collinson
Bioinspired masks, created by merging sol-gel chemistry with biotemplating, were used as local chemical reactors to grow aligned arrays of gold nanoparticle-like wires.
Langmuir | 2007
Pinar Kurt; Lynn Wood; Dennis E. Ohman; Kenneth J. Wynne
Biomaterials | 2006
Umit Makal; Lynn Wood; Dennis E. Ohman; Kenneth J. Wynne
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1997
Lynn Wood; Natalia Y. Tszine; Gail E. Christie
Polymer | 2007
Stephen J. Grunzinger; Pinar Kurt; Kennard Brunson; Lynn Wood; Dennis E. Ohman; Kenneth J. Wynne
Archive | 2013
Kenneth J. Wynne; Pinar Kurt; Kennard Brunson; Asima Chakravorty; Murari Gupta; Wei Zhang; Lynn Wood; Dennis E. Ohman