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Dive into the research topics where Mohannad Abdo is active.

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Featured researches published by Mohannad Abdo.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Biomimetic Seleninates and Selenonates

Mohannad Abdo; Spencer Knapp

The synthesis of a variety of pyranose-, nucleoside-, (amino acid)-, and polyhydric-based seleninic and selenonic acids by DMDO oxidation of the corresponding selenoesters is reported, as well as some unusual coupling reactions of the seleninate and selenonate functionality with biological nucleophilic groups (sulfhydryl, indole, phenol, imidazole, carboxamide) that are found in proteins and enzyme active sites.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Nonequilibrium dynamics of helix reorganization observed by transient 2D IR spectroscopy

Matthew J. Tucker; Mohannad Abdo; Joel R. Courter; Jianxin Chen; Stephen Brown; Amos B. Smith; Robin M. Hochstrasser

Significance Exploration of the helix–coil transition, a fundamental aspect in protein conformational dynamics, remains controversial, with published timescales differing by more than two orders of magnitude. We report measurements of the temporal evolution of local structural parameters within a helix, exploring the free energy landscape near but not initially at the equilibrium conformational distribution. The model helical peptide was constrained with a photosensitive cross-link that can be released in tens of picoseconds upon laser irradiation. Transient 2D IR spectroscopy was used to record structural snapshots of bond distance and bond angle during formation of a single helical turn in an already-nucleated helix upon photorelease. This nonequilibrium approach permits access to transient structures that are averaged out in standard methods. The relaxation of helical structures very close to equilibrium is observed via transient 2D IR spectroscopy. An initial distribution of synthetically distorted helices having an unnatural bridge linking the 10th and 12th residues of an alanine-rich α-helix is released to evolve into the equilibrium distribution of α-helix conformations. The bridge constrains the structure to be slightly displaced from the full α-helix equilibrium near these residues, yet the peptide is not unfolded completely. The release is accomplished by a subpicosecond pulse of UV irradiation. The resulting 2D IR signals are used to obtain snapshots of the ∼100-ps helical conformational reorganization of the distorted dihedral angle and distance between amide units at chemical bond length-scale resolution. The decay rates of the angle between the dipoles, dihedral angles, and distance autocorrelations obtained from molecular dynamics simulations support the experiments, providing evidence that the final helix collapse conforms to linear response theory.


Organic Letters | 2010

Electrophilic Aromatic Selenylation: New OPRT Inhibitors

Mohannad Abdo; Yong Zhang; Vern L. Schramm; Spencer Knapp

2-Ethoxyethaneseleninic acid reacts with electron-rich aromatic substrates to deliver, by way of the selenoxides, the (2-ethoxyethyl)seleno ethers, which can in turn be transformed into a diverse set of aryl-selenylated products. Among these, a family of 5-uridinyl derivatives shows submicromolar inhibition of human and malarial orotate phosphoribosyltransferase.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Seleninate in place of phosphate: Irreversible inhibition of protein tyrosine phosphatases

Mohannad Abdo; Sijiu Liu; Bo Zhou; Chad D. Walls; Li Wu; Spencer Knapp; Zhong Yin Zhang

A homotyrosine based seleninic acid irreversibly inhibits protein tyrosine phosphatases by forming a covalent selenosulfide linkage with the active site cysteine sulfhydryl specifically. The details of the event are revealed by model synthetic studies and by kinetic, mass spectrometric, and crystallographic characterization.


Organic Letters | 2012

Design, synthesis, and photochemical validation of peptide linchpins containing the S,S-tetrazine phototrigger.

Mohannad Abdo; Stephen Brown; Joel R. Courter; Matthew J. Tucker; Robin M. Hochstrasser; Amos B. Smith

The design, solid-phase synthesis, and photochemical validation of diverse peptide linchpins, containing the S,S-tetrazine phototrigger, have been achieved. Steady state irradiation or femtosecond laser pulses confirm their rapid photofragmentation. Attachment of peptides to the C- and N-termini will provide access to diverse constrained peptide constructs that hold the promise of providing information about early peptide/protein conformational dynamics upon photochemical release.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2012

Mechanism of a Redox Coupling of Seleninic Acid with Thiol

Mohannad Abdo; Spencer Knapp

Equimolar quantities of 2-ethoxyethaneseleninic acid and p-thiocresol react rapidly in dichloromethane solution to give the selenosulfide along with disulfide, diselenide, and two products oxidized at sulfur, the thiosulfonate and the selenosulfonate. The latter two are new for this sort of coupling; their formation may be the result of an early thioseleninate to selenosulfinate isomerization. A radical chain mechanism is proposed to account for all five products, as well as their relative amounts.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

GlcNAc-Thiazoline conformations

Spencer Knapp; David Fash; Mohannad Abdo; Thomas J. Emge; Paul R. Rablen

The title compound, a powerful inhibitor of retaining N-acetylhexosaminidases, can move freely among three pyranose solution conformations of similar energy-two twist boats and the (4)C(1) chair-as revealed by NMR, calculational, and crystallographic studies. It binds in the enzyme active site only in the pseudo-(4)C(1) conformation, however, in which it most closely resembles the hypothetical bound substrate transition state, a (4)E sofa that is approximately trigonal bipyramidal at the anomeric carbon.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2013

Vibrational dynamics of a non-degenerate ultrafast rotor: The (C12,C13)-oxalate ion

Daniel G. Kuroda; Mohannad Abdo; Lev Chuntonov; Amos B. Smith; Robin M. Hochstrasser

Molecular ions undergoing ultrafast conformational changes on the same time scale of water motions are of significant importance in condensed phase dynamics. However, the characterization of systems with fast molecular motions has proven to be both experimentally and theoretically challenging. Here, we report the vibrational dynamics of the non-degenerate (C12,C13)-oxalate anion, an ultrafast rotor, in aqueous solution. The infrared absorption spectrum of the (C12,C13)-oxalate ion in solution reveals two vibrational transitions separated by approximately 40 cm(-1) in the 1500-1600 cm(-1) region. These two transitions are assigned to vibrational modes mainly localized in each of the carboxylate asymmetric stretch of the ion. Two-dimensional infrared spectra reveal the presence and growth of cross-peaks between these two transitions which are indicative of coupling and population transfer, respectively. A characteristic time of sub-picosecond cross-peaks growth is observed. Ultrafast pump-probe anisotropy studies reveal essentially the same characteristic time for the dipole reorientation. All the experimental data are well modeled in terms of a system undergoing ultrafast population transfer between localized states. Comparison of the experimental observations with simulations reveal a reasonable agreement, although a mechanism including only the fluctuations of the coupling caused by the changes in the dihedral angle of the rotor, is not sufficient to explain the observed ultrafast population transfer.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2014

The Design and Synthesis of Alanine-Rich α-Helical Peptides Constrained by an S,S-Tetrazine Photochemical Trigger: A Fragment Union Approach

Joel R. Courter; Mohannad Abdo; Stephen Brown; Matthew J. Tucker; Robin M. Hochstrasser; Amos B. Smith

The design and synthesis of alanine-rich α-helical peptides constrained in a partially unfolded state by incorporation of the S,S-tetrazine phototrigger has been achieved, permitting, upon photochemical release, observation by 2D-IR spectroscopy of the subnanosecond conformational dynamics that govern the early steps associated with α-helix formation. Solid-phase peptide synthesis was employed to elaborate the requisite fragments, with full peptide construction via solution-phase fragment condensation. The fragment union tactic was also employed to construct (13)C═(18)O isotopically edited amides to permit direct observation of conformational motion at or near specific peptide bonds.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

OGA inhibition by GlcNAc-selenazoline.

Eun J. Kim; Dona C. Love; Etzer Darout; Mohannad Abdo; Brian P. Rempel; Stephen G. Withers; Paul R. Rablen; John A. Hanover; Spencer Knapp

The title compound, which differs from the powerful O-GlcNAcase (OGA) inhibitor GlcNAc-thiazoline only at the chalcogen atom (Se for S), is a much weaker inhibitor in a direct OGA assay. In human cells, however, the selenazoline shows comparable ability to induce hyper-O-GlcNAc-ylation, and the two show similar reduction of insulin-stimulated translocation of glucose transporter 4 in differentiated 3T3 adipocytes.

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Amos B. Smith

University of Pennsylvania

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Joel R. Courter

University of Pennsylvania

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Matthew J. Tucker

University of Pennsylvania

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John A. Hanover

National Institutes of Health

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Stephen Brown

University of Notre Dame

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Dona C. Love

National Institutes of Health

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Jianxin Chen

University of Pennsylvania

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