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Dive into the research topics where Matthew C. Taylor is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew C. Taylor.


The ISME Journal | 2016

Genomic and metagenomic surveys of hydrogenase distribution indicate H2 is a widely utilised energy source for microbial growth and survival

Chris Greening; Ambarish Biswas; Carlo R Carere; Colin J. Jackson; Matthew C. Taylor; Matthew B. Stott; Gregory M. Cook; Sergio E. Morales

Recent physiological and ecological studies have challenged the long-held belief that microbial metabolism of molecular hydrogen (H2) is a niche process. To gain a broader insight into the importance of microbial H2 metabolism, we comprehensively surveyed the genomic and metagenomic distribution of hydrogenases, the reversible enzymes that catalyse the oxidation and evolution of H2. The protein sequences of 3286 non-redundant putative hydrogenases were curated from publicly available databases. These metalloenzymes were classified into multiple groups based on (1) amino acid sequence phylogeny, (2) metal-binding motifs, (3) predicted genetic organisation and (4) reported biochemical characteristics. Four groups (22 subgroups) of [NiFe]-hydrogenase, three groups (6 subtypes) of [FeFe]-hydrogenases and a small group of [Fe]-hydrogenases were identified. We predict that this hydrogenase diversity supports H2-based respiration, fermentation and carbon fixation processes in both oxic and anoxic environments, in addition to various H2-sensing, electron-bifurcation and energy-conversion mechanisms. Hydrogenase-encoding genes were identified in 51 bacterial and archaeal phyla, suggesting strong pressure for both vertical and lateral acquisition. Furthermore, hydrogenase genes could be recovered from diverse terrestrial, aquatic and host-associated metagenomes in varying proportions, indicating a broad ecological distribution and utilisation. Oxygen content (pO2) appears to be a central factor driving the phylum- and ecosystem-level distribution of these genes. In addition to compounding evidence that H2 was the first electron donor for life, our analysis suggests that the great diversification of hydrogenases has enabled H2 metabolism to sustain the growth or survival of microorganisms in a wide range of ecosystems to the present day. This work also provides a comprehensive expanded system for classifying hydrogenases and identifies new prospects for investigating H2 metabolism.


Indian Journal of Microbiology | 2008

The enzymatic basis for pesticide bioremediation.

Colin Scott; Gunjan Pandey; Carol J. Hartley; Colin J. Jackson; Matthew J. Cheesman; Matthew C. Taylor; Rinku Pandey; Jeevan Khurana; Mark Teese; Christopher W. Coppin; Khali Weir; Rakesh K. Jain; Rup Lal; Robyn J. Russell; John G. Oakeshott

Enzymes are central to the biology of many pesticides, influencing their modes of action, environmental fates and mechanisms of target species resistance. Since the introduction of synthetic xenobiotic pesticides, enzymes responsible for pesticide turnover have evolved rapidly, in both the target organisms and incidentally exposed biota. Such enzymes are a source of significant biotechnological potential and form the basis of several bioremediation strategies intended to reduce the environmental impacts of pesticide residues. This review describes examples of enzymes possessing the major activities employed in the bioremediation of pesticide residues, and some of the strategies by which they are employed. In addition, several examples of specific achievements in enzyme engineering are considered, highlighting the growing trend in tailoring enzymatic activity to a specific biotechnologically relevant function.


BMC Biochemistry | 2008

Deubiquitylating enzymes and disease

Shweta Singhal; Matthew C. Taylor; Rohan T. Baker

AbstractDeubiquitylating enzymes (DUBs) can hydrolyze a peptide, amide, ester or thiolester bond at the C-terminus of UBIQ (ubiquitin), including the post-translationally formed branched peptide bonds in mono- or multi-ubiquitylated conjugates. DUBs thus have the potential to regulate any UBIQ-mediated cellular process, the two best characterized being proteolysis and protein trafficking. Mammals contain some 80–90 DUBs in five different subfamilies, only a handful of which have been characterized with respect to the proteins that they interact with and deubiquitylate. Several other DUBs have been implicated in various disease processes in which they are changed by mutation, have altered expression levels, and/or form part of regulatory complexes. Specific examples of DUB involvement in various diseases are presented. While no specific drugs targeting DUBs have yet been described, sufficient functional and structural information has accumulated in some cases to allow their rapid development.Publication historyRepublished from Current BioDatas Targeted Proteins database (TPdb; http://www.targetedproteinsdb.com).


Molecular Microbiology | 2010

Identification and characterization of two families of F420H2-dependent reductases from Mycobacteria that catalyse aflatoxin degradation

Matthew C. Taylor; Colin J. Jackson; David Tattersall; Nigel G. French; Thomas S. Peat; Janet Newman; Lyndall J. Briggs; Gauri V. Lapalikar; Peter M. Campbell; Colin Scott; Robyn J. Russell; John G. Oakeshott

Aflatoxins are polyaromatic mycotoxins that contaminate a range of food crops as a result of fungal growth and contribute to serious health problems in the developing world because of their toxicity and mutagenicity. Although relatively resistant to biotic degradation, aflatoxins can be metabolized by certain species of Actinomycetales. However, the enzymatic basis for their breakdown has not been reported until now. We have identified nine Mycobacterium smegmatis enzymes that utilize the deazaflavin cofactor F420H2 to catalyse the reduction of the α,β‐unsaturated ester moiety of aflatoxins, activating the molecules for spontaneous hydrolysis and detoxification. These enzymes belong to two previously uncharacterized F420H2 dependent reductase (FDR‐A and ‐B) families that are distantly related to the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) dependent pyridoxamine 5′‐phosphate oxidases (PNPOxs). We have solved crystal structures of an enzyme from each FDR family and show that they, like the PNPOxs, adopt a split barrel protein fold, although the FDRs also possess an extended and highly charged F420H2 binding groove. A general role for these enzymes in xenobiotic metabolism is discussed, including the observation that the nitro‐reductase Rv3547 from Mycobacterium tuberculosis that is responsible for the activation of bicyclic nitroimidazole prodrugs belongs to the FDR‐A family.


Evolutionary Applications | 2011

The evolution of new enzyme function: lessons from xenobiotic metabolizing bacteria versus insecticide-resistant insects.

Robyn J. Russell; Colin Scott; Colin J. Jackson; Rinku Pandey; Gunjan Pandey; Matthew C. Taylor; Christopher W. Coppin; Jian-Wei Liu; John G. Oakeshott

Here, we compare the evolutionary routes by which bacteria and insects have evolved enzymatic processes for the degradation of four classes of synthetic chemical insecticide. For insects, the selective advantage of such degradative activities is survival on exposure to the insecticide, whereas for the bacteria the advantage is simply a matter of access to additional sources of nutrients. Nevertheless, bacteria have evolved highly efficient enzymes from a wide variety of enzyme families, whereas insects have relied upon generalist esterase‐, cytochrome P450‐ and glutathione‐S‐transferase‐dependent detoxification systems. Moreover, the mutant insect enzymes are less efficient kinetically and less diverged in sequence from their putative ancestors than their bacterial counterparts. This presumably reflects several advantages that bacteria have over insects in the acquisition of new enzymatic functions, such as a broad biochemical repertoire from which new functions can be evolved, large population sizes, high effective mutation rates, very short generation times and access to genetic diversity through horizontal gene transfer. Both the insect and bacterial systems support recent theory proposing that new biochemical functions often evolve from ‘promiscuous’ activities in existing enzymes, with subsequent mutations then enhancing those activities. Study of the insect enzymes will help in resistance management, while the bacterial enzymes are potential bioremediants of insecticide residues in a range of contaminated environments.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Improving a Natural Enzyme Activity through Incorporation of Unnatural Amino Acids

Isaac N Ugwumba; Kiyoshi Ozawa; Zhi-Qiang Xu; Fernanda Ely; Jee Foo; Anthony J. Herlt; Christopher W. Coppin; Susan E. Brown; Matthew C. Taylor; David L. Ollis; Lewis N. Mander; Gerhard Schenk; Nicholas E. Dixon; Gottfried Otting; John G. Oakeshott; Colin J. Jackson

The bacterial phosphotriesterases catalyze hydrolysis of the pesticide paraoxon with very fast turnover rates and are thought to be near to their evolutionary limit for this activity. To test whether the naturally evolved turnover rate could be improved through the incorporation of unnatural amino acids and to probe the role of peripheral active site residues in nonchemical steps of the catalytic cycle (substrate binding and product release), we replaced the naturally occurring tyrosine amino acid at position 309 with unnatural L-(7-hydroxycoumarin-4-yl)ethylglycine (Hco) and L-(7-methylcoumarin-4-yl)ethylglycine amino acids, as well as leucine, phenylalanine, and tryptophan. Kinetic analysis suggests that the 7-hydroxyl group of Hco, particularly in its deprotonated state, contributes to an increase in the rate-limiting product release step of substrate turnover as a result of its electrostatic repulsion of the negatively charged 4-nitrophenolate product of paraoxon hydrolysis. The 8-11-fold improvement of this already highly efficient catalyst through a single rationally designed mutation using an unnatural amino acid stands in contrast to the difficulty in improving this native activity through screening hundreds of thousands of mutants with natural amino acids. These results demonstrate that designer amino acids provide easy access to new and valuable sequence and functional space for the engineering and evolution of existing enzyme functions.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2010

A free-enzyme catalyst for the bioremediation of environmental atrazine contamination

Colin Scott; Steve E. Lewis; Rob Milla; Matthew C. Taylor; Andrew J.W. Rodgers; Geoff Dumsday; Jon Brodie; John G. Oakeshott; Robyn J. Russell

Herbicide contamination from agriculture is a major issue worldwide, and has been identified as a threat to freshwater and marine environments in the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area in Australia. The triazine herbicides are of particular concern because of potential adverse effects, both on photosynthetic organisms and upon vertebrate development. To date a number of bioremediation strategies have been proposed for triazine herbicides, but are unlikely to be implemented due to their reliance upon the release of genetically modified organisms. We propose an alternative strategy using a free-enzyme bioremediant, which is unconstrained by the issues surrounding the use of live organisms. Here we report an initial field trial with an enzyme-based product, demonstrating that the technology is technically capable of remediating water bodies contaminated with the most common triazine herbicide, atrazine.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Intramolecular Epistasis and the Evolution of a New Enzymatic Function

Sajid Noor; Matthew C. Taylor; Robyn J. Russell; Lars S. Jermiin; Colin J. Jackson; John G. Oakeshott; Colin Scott

Atrazine chlorohydrolase (AtzA) and its close relative melamine deaminase (TriA) differ by just nine amino acid substitutions but have distinct catalytic activities. Together, they offer an informative model system to study the molecular processes that underpin the emergence of new enzymatic function. Here we have constructed the potential evolutionary trajectories between AtzA and TriA, and characterized the catalytic activities and biophysical properties of the intermediates along those trajectories. The order in which the nine amino acid substitutions that separate the enzymes could be introduced to either enzyme, while maintaining significant catalytic activity, was dictated by epistatic interactions, principally between three amino acids within the active site: namely, S331C, N328D and F84L. The mechanistic basis for the epistatic relationships is consistent with a model for the catalytic mechanisms in which protonation is required for hydrolysis of melamine, but not atrazine.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2015

Metabolic engineering of medium-chain fatty acid biosynthesis in Nicotiana benthamiana plant leaf lipids

Kyle Reynolds; Matthew C. Taylor; Xue-Rong Zhou; Thomas Vanhercke; Craig C. Wood; Christopher Blanchard; Surinder Singh; James R. Petrie

Various research groups are investigating the production of oil in non-seed biomass such as leaves. Recently, high levels of oil accumulation have been achieved in plant biomass using a combination of biotechnological approaches which also resulted in significant changes to the fatty acid composition of the leaf oil. In this study, we were interested to determine whether medium-chain fatty acids (MCFA) could be accumulated in leaf oil. MCFA are an ideal feedstock for biodiesel and a range of oleochemical products including lubricants, coatings, and detergents. In this study, we explore the synthesis, accumulation, and glycerolipid head-group distribution of MCFA in leaves of Nicotiana benthamiana after transient transgenic expression of C12:0-, C14:0-, and C16:0-ACP thioesterase genes. We demonstrate that the production of these MCFA in leaf is increased by the co-expression of the WRINKLED1 (WRI1) transcription factor, with the lysophosphatidic acid acyltransferase (LPAAT) from Cocos nucifera being required for the assembly of tri-MCFA TAG species. We also demonstrate that the newly-produced MCFA are incorporated into the triacylglycerol of leaves in which WRI1 + diacylglycerol acyltransferase1 (DGAT1) genes are co-expressed for increased oil accumulation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Persistence of the dominant soil phylum Acidobacteria by trace gas scavenging

Chris Greening; Carlo C. Carere; Rowena Rushton-Green; Liam K. Harold; Kiel Hards; Matthew C. Taylor; Sergio E. Morales; Matthew B. Stott; Gregory M. Cook

Significance The mechanisms that the “dormant microbial majority” use to remain energized in nutrient-starved soil ecosystems have long remained elusive. In this work, we used an isolate of the highly abundant but poorly understood soil phylum Acidobacteria as a model for understanding microbial persistence mechanisms. When the bacterium entered a persistent state due to nutrient-exhaustion, we showed it could scavenge the trace concentrations of molecular hydrogen gas (H2) found in ambient air using a specialized high-affinity enzyme. These findings demonstrate that Acidobacteria can consume H2 and contribute to global hydrogen cycling. We propose that consumption of trace gases such as H2 provides a dependable general mechanism for dominant soil phyla to generate the maintenance energy required for long-term survival. The majority of microbial cells in global soils exist in a spectrum of dormant states. However, the metabolic processes that enable them to survive environmental challenges, such as nutrient-limitation, remain to be elucidated. In this work, we demonstrate that energy-starved cultures of Pyrinomonas methylaliphatogenes, an aerobic heterotrophic acidobacterium isolated from New Zealand volcanic soils, persist by scavenging the picomolar concentrations of H2 distributed throughout the atmosphere. Following the transition from exponential to stationary phase due to glucose limitation, the bacterium up-regulates by fourfold the expression of an eight-gene operon encoding an actinobacteria-type H2-uptake [NiFe]-hydrogenase. Whole-cells of the organism consume atmospheric H2 in a first-order kinetic process. Hydrogen oxidation occurred most rapidly under oxic conditions and was weakly associated with the cell membrane. We propose that atmospheric H2 scavenging serves as a mechanism to sustain the respiratory chain of P. methylaliphatogenes when organic electron donors are scarce. As the first observation of H2 oxidation to our knowledge in the Acidobacteria, the second most dominant soil phylum, this work identifies new sinks in the biogeochemical H2 cycle and suggests that trace gas oxidation may be a general mechanism for microbial persistence.

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John G. Oakeshott

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Robyn J. Russell

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Colin J. Jackson

Australian National University

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Colin Scott

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Chris Greening

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Andrew C. Warden

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Gunjan Pandey

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Surinder Singh

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Xue-Rong Zhou

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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James R. Petrie

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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