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Dive into the research topics where Patrick H. Dussault is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrick H. Dussault.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

Quorum sensing in the dimorphic fungus Candida albicans is mediated by farnesol

Jacob M. Hornby; Ellen C. Jensen; Amber D. Lisec; Joseph J. Tasto; Brandon Jahnke; Richard K. Shoemaker; Patrick H. Dussault; Kenneth W. Nickerson

ABSTRACT The inoculum size effect in the dimorphic fungus Candida albicans results from production of an extracellular quorum-sensing molecule (QSM). This molecule prevents mycelial development in both a growth morphology assay and a differentiation assay using three chemically distinct triggers for germ tube formation (GTF): l-proline, N-acetylglucosamine, and serum (either pig or fetal bovine). In all cases, the presence of QSM prevents the yeast-to-mycelium conversion, resulting in actively budding yeasts without influencing cellular growth rates. QSM exhibits general cross-reactivity within C. albicans in that supernatants from strain A72 are active on five other strains ofC. albicans and vice versa. The QSM excreted by C. albicans is farnesol (C15H26O; molecular weight, 222.37). QSM is extracellular, and is produced continuously during growth and over a temperature range from 23 to 43°C, in amounts roughly proportional to the CFU/milliliter. Production is not dependent on the type of carbon source nor nitrogen source or on the chemical nature of the growth medium. Both commercial mixed isomer and (E,E)-farnesol exhibited QSM activity (the ability to prevent GTF) at a level sufficient to account for all the QSM activity present in C. albicans supernatants, i.e., 50% GTF at ca. 30 to 35 μM. Nerolidol was ca. two times less active than farnesol. Neither geraniol (C10), geranylgeraniol (C20), nor farnesyl pyrophosphate had any QSM activity.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Biosynthesis of HSAF, a Tetramic Acid-containing Macrolactam from Lysobacter enzymogenes

Lili Lou; Guoliang Qian; Yunxuan Xie; Jiliang Hang; Haotong Chen; Kathia Zaleta-Rivera; Yaoyao Li; Yuemao Shen; Patrick H. Dussault; Fengquan Liu; Liangcheng Du

HSAF was isolated from Lysobacter enzymogenes , a bacterium used in the biological control of fungal diseases of plants. Structurally, it is a tetramic acid-containing macrolactam fused to a tricyclic system. HSAF exhibits a novel mode of action by disrupting sphingolipids important to the polarized growth of filamentous fungi. Here we describe the HSAF biosynthetic gene cluster, which contains only a single-module polyketide synthase/nonribosomal peptide synthetase (PKS/NRPS), although the biosynthesis of HSAF apparently requires two separate polyketide chains that are linked together by one amino acid (ornithine) via two amide bonds. Flanking the PKS/NRPS are six genes that encoding a cascade of four tightly clustered redox enzymes on one side and a sterol desaturase/fatty acid hydroxylase and a ferredoxin reductase on the other side. The genetic data demonstrate that the four redox genes, in addition to the PKS/NRPS gene and the sterol desaturase/fatty acid hydroxylase gene, are required for HSAF production. The biochemical data show that the adenylation domain of the NRPS specifically activates L-ornithine and that the four-domain NRPS is able to catalyze the formation of a tetramic acid-containing product from acyl-S-ACP and ornithinyl-S-NRPS. These results reveal a previously unrecognized biosynthetic mechanism for hybrid PK/NRP in prokaryotic organisms.


Chemistry & Biology | 2003

Quorum sensing in Candida albicans: probing farnesol's mode of action with 40 natural and synthetic farnesol analogs.

Roman Shchepin; Jacob M. Hornby; Timothy Niessen; Patrick H. Dussault; Kenneth W. Nickerson

The dimorphic fungus Candida albicans produces extracellular farnesol (3,7,11-trimethyl-2,6,10-dodecatriene-1-ol) which acts as a quorum-sensing molecule (QSM) to suppress filamentation. Of four possible geometric isomers of farnesol, only the E,E isomer possesses QSM activity. We tested 40 natural and synthetic analogs of farnesol for their activity in an N-acetylglucosamine-induced differentiation assay for germ tube formation (GTF). Modified structural features include the head group, chain length, presence or absence of the three double bonds, substitution of a backbone carbon by S, O, N, and Se heteroatoms, presence or absence of a 3-methyl branch, and the bulkiness of the hydrophobic tail. Of the 40 compounds, 22 showed QSM activity by their ability to reduce GTF by 50%. However, even the most active of the analogs tested had only 7.3% of the activity of E,E-farnesol. Structure-activity relationships were examined in terms of the likely presence in C. albicans of a farnesol binding receptor protein.


Organic Letters | 2008

Mild and Efficient Re(VII)-Catalyzed Synthesis of 1,1-Dihydroperoxides

Prasanta Ghorai; Patrick H. Dussault

Re2O7 in CH3CN is a remarkably efficient and mild catalyst for the peroxyacetalization of ketones, aldehydes, or acetals by H2O2 to generate 1,1-dihydroperoxides. Me3SiOReO3 and methyl rhenium trioxide (MTO) are also effective catalysts under these reaction conditions.


Organic Letters | 2009

Broadly applicable synthesis of 1,2,4,5-tetraoxanes

Prasanta Ghorai; Patrick H. Dussault

Re(2)O(7) is a mild and efficient catalyst for the high-yielding condensation of 1,1-dihydroperoxides with ketones or aldehydes to form 1,2,4,5-tetraoxanes, including targets not easily prepared via existing methodology. When applied in tandem with a recently reported Re(VII)-catalyzed synthesis of 1,1-dihydroperoxides, the reaction provides a high-yielding one-pot conversion of ketones or aldehydes to tetraoxanes.


Organic Letters | 2008

Synthesis of spiro-bisperoxyketals

Prasanta Ghorai; Patrick H. Dussault; Chunhua Hu

Syntheses of spirocyclic bis-1,2-dioxolanes, bis-1,2-dioxanes, and bis-1,2-dioxepanes are achieved through intramolecular ketalizations of hydroperoxy ketones or intramolecular alkylations of gem-dihydroperoxides. The spiroperoxides have excellent thermal and chemical stability, and several display promising activity against P. falciparum.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2008

Ozonolysis in Solvent/Water Mixtures : Direct Conversion of Alkenes to Aldehydes and Ketones

Charles E. Schiaffo; Patrick H. Dussault

Ozonolysis of alkenes in the presence of solubilized water results in the direct formation of aldehydes and/or ketones, avoiding the need to isolate or decompose ozonides.


Organic Letters | 2012

Pyridine Is an Organocatalyst for the Reductive Ozonolysis of Alkenes

Rachel Willand-Charnley; Thomas J. Fisher; Bradley M. Johnson; Patrick H. Dussault

Whereas the cleavage of alkenes by ozone typically generates peroxide intermediates that must be decomposed in an accompanying step, ozonolysis in the presence of pyridine directly generates ketones or aldehydes through a process that neither consumes pyridine nor generates any detectable peroxides. The reaction is hypothesized to involve nucleophile-promoted fragmentation of carbonyl oxides via formation of zwitterionic peroxyacetals.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2010

Plant sterol and stanol substrate specificity of pancreatic cholesterol esterase.

Andrew W. Brown; Jiliang Hang; Patrick H. Dussault; Timothy P. Carr

Consumption of plant sterols or stanols (collectively referred to as phytosterols) and their esters results in decreased low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, which is associated with decreased atherosclerotic risk. The mechanisms by which phytosterols impart their effects, however, are incompletely characterized. The objective of the present study is to determine if pancreatic cholesterol esterase (PCE; EC 3.1.1.13), the enzyme primarily responsible for cholesterol ester hydrolysis in the digestive tract, is capable of hydrolyzing various phytosterol esters and to compare the rates of sterol ester hydrolysis in vitro. We found that PCE hydrolyzes palmitate, oleate and stearate esters of cholesterol, stigmasterol, stigmastanol and sitosterol. Furthermore, we found that the rate of hydrolysis was dependent on both the sterol and the fatty acid moieties in the following order of rates of hydrolysis: cholesterol>(sitosterol=stigmastanol)>stigmasterol; oleate>(palmitate=stearate). The addition of free phytosterols to the system did not change hydrolytic activity of PCE, while addition of palmitate, oleate or stearate increased activity. Thus, PCE may play an important but discriminatory role in vivo in the liberation of free phytosterols to compete with cholesterol for micellar solubilization and absorption.


Organic Letters | 2010

B(C6F5)3-promoted tandem silylation and intramolecular hydrosilylation: diastereoselective synthesis of oxasilinanes and oxasilepanes.

Roman Shchepin; Chunping Xu; Patrick H. Dussault

B(C(6)F(5))(3) promotes regio- and stereoselective cyclizations of unsaturated alkoxysilanes to generate oxasilinanes and oxasilepanes. The same products are available directly from alkenols via tandem silylation and hydrosilylation.

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Jiliang Hang

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Thomas J. Fisher

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Timothy P. Carr

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Rebecca Y. Lai

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Charles E. Schiaffo

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Chris Schwartz

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Wantanee Sittiwong

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Andrew W. Brown

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Ayman Sahli

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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In Quen Lee

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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