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Dive into the research topics where Randolph V. Lewis is active.

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Featured researches published by Randolph V. Lewis.


Trends in Biotechnology | 2000

Synthetic spider silk: a modular fiber

Michael B. Hinman; Justin A. Jones; Randolph V. Lewis

Spiders make their webs and perform a wide range of tasks with up to seven different types of silk fiber. These different fibers allow a comparison of structure with function, because each silk has distinct mechanical properties and is composed of peptide modules that confer those properties. By using genetic engineering to mix the modules in specific proportions, proteins with defined strength and elasticity can be designed, which have many potential medical and engineering uses.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1979

Putative enkephalin precursors in bovine adrenal medulla.

Randolph V. Lewis; Alvin S. Stern; J Rossier; Stanley Stein; Sidney Udenfriend

Abstract Extracts from bovine adrenal medulla and adrenal medullary chromaffin granules were found to contain three proteins, 20,000, 10,000 and 5,000 approximate molecular weights which yield tryptic peptides with opioid activity. The opioid activity of these peptides was demonstrated with a radioreceptor assay and two radioimmunoassays. The three proteins yield the same active peptides all of which are chromatographically distinct from the tryptic opioid nonapeptide β-LPH 61–69, generated by trypsin digestion of pituitary endorphins and their precursors. Furthermore, these endorphins and their precursors do not appear to be present in the adrenal medulla. These findings further support the hypothesis that the enkephalin biosynthetic pathway is distinct from that leading to β-endorphin.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Silkworms transformed with chimeric silkworm/spider silk genes spin composite silk fibers with improved mechanical properties

Florence Teulé; Yun-gen Miao; Bonghee Sohn; Youngsoo Kim; J. Joe Hull; Malcolm J. Fraser; Randolph V. Lewis; Donald L. Jarvis

The development of a spider silk-manufacturing process is of great interest. However, there are serious problems with natural manufacturing through spider farming, and standard recombinant protein production platforms have provided limited progress due to their inability to assemble spider silk proteins into fibers. Thus, we used piggyBac vectors to create transgenic silkworms encoding chimeric silkworm/spider silk proteins. The silk fibers produced by these animals were composite materials that included chimeric silkworm/spider silk proteins integrated in an extremely stable manner. Furthermore, these composite fibers were, on average, tougher than the parental silkworm silk fibers and as tough as native dragline spider silk fibers. These results demonstrate that silkworms can be engineered to manufacture composite silk fibers containing stably integrated spider silk protein sequences, which significantly improve the overall mechanical properties of the parental silkworm silk fibers.


Analytical Biochemistry | 1980

Supports for reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography of large proteins

Randolph V. Lewis; Anthony Fallon; Stanley Stein; Kenneth D. Gibson; Sidney Udenfriend

Abstract Reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography supports have been developed for use in separating proteins up to 300,000 M r . They are based on silica supports to which octyl, cyanopropyl, or diphenyl groups are covalently bonded. Their effectiveness in rapidly separating several standard proteins is demonstrated. Applications presented include the separation of the α 1 and α 2 chains of chick Type I collagen within 1 h and the separation of the α and β components of human Type I collagen.


Journal of Molecular Recognition | 1997

Structural studies of spider silk proteins in the fiber

Ajay D. Parkhe; Stacy K. Seeley; Kenneth Gardner; Lynmarie K. Thompson; Randolph V. Lewis

Although spider silk has been studied for a number of years the structures of the proteins involved have yet to be definitely determined. X‐ray diffraction and solid‐state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) were used to study major ampullate (dragline) silk from Nephila clavipes. The silk was studied in its natural state, in the supercontacted state and in the restretched state following supercontraction. The natural silk structure is dominated by β‐sheets aligned parallel to the fiber axis. Supercontraction is characterized by randomizing of the orientation of the β‐sheet. When the fiber is restretched alignment is regained. However, the same reorientation was observed for wetting of minor ampullate silk which does not supercontract. Thus, the reorientation of β‐sheets alone cannot explain the supercontraction in dragline silk. Cocoon silk showed very little β‐sheet orientation in the natural state and there were no changes upon wetting. NMR and X‐ray diffraction data are consistent with the β‐sheets arising from the poly‐alanine sequences known to be present in the proteins of major ampullate silk as has been proposed previously.


Nature Protocols | 2009

A protocol for the production of recombinant spider silk-like proteins for artificial fiber spinning.

Florence Teulé; Alyssa R. Cooper; William A. Furin; Daniela Bittencourt; Elibio L. Rech; Amanda E. Brooks; Randolph V. Lewis

The extreme strength and elasticity of spider silks originate from the modular nature of their repetitive proteins. To exploit such materials and mimic spider silks, comprehensive strategies to produce and spin recombinant fibrous proteins are necessary. This protocol describes silk gene design and cloning, protein expression in bacteria, recombinant protein purification and fiber formation. With an improved gene construction and cloning scheme, this technique is adaptable for the production of any repetitive fibrous proteins, and ensures the exact reproduction of native repeat sequences, analogs or chimeric versions. The proteins are solubilized in 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoro-2-propanol (HFIP) at 25–30% (wt/vol) for extrusion into fibers. This protocol, routinely used to spin single micrometer-size fibers from several recombinant silk-like proteins from different spider species, is a powerful tool to generate protein libraries with corresponding fibers for structure–function relationship investigations in protein-based biomaterials. This protocol may be completed in 40 d.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Determining Secondary Structure in Spider Dragline Silk by Carbon−Carbon Correlation Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy

Gregory P. Holland; Melinda S. Creager; Janelle E. Jenkins; Randolph V. Lewis; Jeffery L. Yarger

Two-dimensional (2D) (13)C-(13)C NMR correlation spectra were collected on (13)C-enriched dragline silk fibers produced from Nephila clavipes spiders. The 2D NMR spectra were acquired under fast magic-angle spinning (MAS) and dipolar-assisted rotational resonance (DARR) recoupling to enhance magnetization transfer between (13)C spins. Spectra obtained with short (150 ms) recoupling periods were utilized to extract distinct chemical shifts for all carbon resonances of each labeled amino acid in the silk spectra, resulting in a complete resonance assignment. The NMR results presented here permit extraction of the precise chemical shift of the carbonyl environment for each (13)C-labeled amino acid in spider silk for the first time. Spectra collected with longer recoupling periods (1 s) were implemented to detect intermolecular magnetization exchange between neighboring amino acids. This information is used to ascribe NMR resonances to the specific repetitive amino acid motifs prevalent in spider silk proteins. These results indicate that glycine and alanine are both present in two distinct structural environments: a disordered 3(1)-helical conformation and an ordered beta-sheet structure. The former can be ascribed to the Gly-Gly-Ala motif while the latter is assigned to the poly(Ala) and poly(Gly-Ala) domains.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1986

A complete amino acid sequence for the basic subunit of crotoxin

Steven D. Aird; Ivan I. Kaiser; Randolph V. Lewis; W. G. Kruggel

The complete amino acid sequence of the basic subunit of crotoxin from the venom of Crotalus durissus terrificus has been determined. Fragmentation of the protein was achieved by using cyanogen bromide and arginine- and lysine-specific endoproteases. Sixteen Glx and Asx residues reported by Fraenkel-Conrat et al. (1980) in Natural Toxins (D. Eaker and T. Wadstrom, eds.), pp. 561-567, Pergamon, Oxford.) have been resolved as Glu or Gln and Asp or Asn residues, respectively. Most of the remaining sequence is identical to that reported by the foregoing authors although several significant differences were evident in our protein. Tyr-61 was not present; thus the correct sequence is Lys-60, Trp-61. The latter sequence aligns with sequences of all other known viperid and crotalid phospholipases A2 (S. D. Aird, I. I. Kaiser, R. V. Lewis, and W. G. Kruggel (1985) Biochemistry 24, 7054-7058). Other differences include Asx-99, which is Ser, and Asx-105, which is Tyr. Some positions display allelic variation. In some lots of venom Glx-33 is Gln, while in others it is Arg. Positions 37 and 69 occur as mixtures of both Lys and Arg. Amino acid sequence comparisons between the basic and acidic subunits of crotoxin and between the basic subunit and other phospholipase A2 molecules indicate that the basic subunit is structurally most similar to the monomers of nontoxic, dimeric phospholipases A2 from the venoms of Crotalus adamanteus, Crotalus atrox, and Trimeresurus okinavensis, and to the toxic monomeric phospholipase A2 from the venom of Bitis caudalis.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1980

Opioid hexapeptides and heptapeptides in adrenal medulla and brain possible implications on the biosynthesis of enkephalins

Alvin S. Stern; Randolph V. Lewis; Sadao Kimura; J Rossier; Stanley Stein; Sidney Udenfriend

Bovine adrenal chromaffin granules have been shown to contain [Met]enkephalin and [Leu]enkephalin and at least seven other small peptides that exhibit specific binding to opiate receptors. Six of these peptides have been characterized and their structures established as (O)-[Met]enkephalin, [Met]enkephalin-Arg6-Arg7, [Met]enkephalin-Lys6, [Met]enkephalin-Arg6, [Leu]enkephalin-Arg6, and [Met]enkephalin-Arg6-Phe7. Many of these hexa- and heptapeptides are also present in bovine and human brain. It is suggested that the presence of these peptides in a tissue is evidence of a common biosynthetic pathway of the enkephalins from a large precursor protein.


Biomacromolecules | 2010

Quantitative Correlation between the protein primary sequences and secondary structures in spider dragline silks.

Janelle E. Jenkins; Melinda S. Creager; Randolph V. Lewis; Gregory P. Holland; Jeffery L. Yarger

Synthetic spider silk holds great potential for use in various applications spanning medical uses to ultra lightweight armor; however, producing synthetic fibers with mechanical properties comparable to natural spider silk has eluded the scientific community. Natural dragline spider silks are commonly made from proteins that contain highly repetitive amino acid motifs, adopting an array of secondary structures. Before further advances can be made in the production of synthetic fibers based on spider silk proteins, it is imperative to know the percentage of each amino acid in the protein that forms a specific secondary structure. Linking these percentages to the primary amino acid sequence of the protein will establish a structural foundation for synthetic silk. In this study, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques are used to quantify the percentage of Ala, Gly, and Ser that form both beta-sheet and helical secondary structures. The fraction of these three amino acids and their secondary structure are quantitatively correlated to the primary amino acid sequence for the proteins that comprise major and minor ampullate silk from the Nephila clavipes spider providing a blueprint for synthetic spider silks.

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Sidney Udenfriend

Roche Institute of Molecular Biology

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