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Dive into the research topics where Robert A. Fecik is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert A. Fecik.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Cytotoxic Simplified Tubulysin Analogues

Bhooma Raghavan; Ranganathan Balasubramanian; Jaeson C. Steele; Dan L. Sackett; Robert A. Fecik

An efficient route for the synthesis of the tubulysin family of antimitotic peptides was developed. Simplified tubulysin analogues were synthesized to define the minimum pharmacophore required for cytotoxicity. Simplified tubulysin analogues retain significant cytotoxicity and reveal important preliminary structure-activity relationships.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Total synthesis and biological evaluation of tubulysin U, tubulysin V, and their analogues.

Ranganathan Balasubramanian; Bhooma Raghavan; Adrian Begaye; Dan L. Sackett; Robert A. Fecik

A stereoselective total synthesis of the cytotoxic natural products tubulysin U, tubulysin V, and its unnatural epimer epi-tubulysin V, is reported. Simplified analogues containing N,N-dimethyl-D-alanine as a replacement for the N-terminal N-Me-pipecolinic acid residue of the tubulysins are also disclosed. Biological evaluation of these natural products and analogues provided key information with regard to structural and stereochemical requirements for antiproliferative activity and tubulin polymerization inhibition.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Tubulysin analogs incorporating desmethyl and dimethyl tubuphenylalanine derivatives.

Ranganathan Balasubramanian; Bhooma Raghavan; Jaeson C. Steele; Dan L. Sackett; Robert A. Fecik

A series of tubulysin analogs in which one of the stereogenic centers of tubuphenylalanine was eliminated were synthesized. All compounds were tested for antiproliferative activity towards ovarian cancer cells and for inhibition of tubulin polymerization. The dimethyl analogs were generally more active than the desmethyl analogs, and four analogs have tubulin polymerization IC(50) values similar to combretastatin A4 and the hemiasterlin analog HTI-286.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2014

Polyketide Intermediate Mimics as Probes for Revealing Cryptic Stereochemistry of Ketoreductase Domains

Yang Li; William D. Fiers; Steffen M. Bernard; Janet L. Smith; Courtney C. Aldrich; Robert A. Fecik

Among natural product families, polyketides have shown the most promise for combinatorial biosynthesis of natural product-like libraries. Though recent research in the area has provided many mechanistic revelations, a basic-level understanding of kinetic and substrate tolerability is still needed before the full potential of combinatorial biosynthesis can be realized. We have developed a novel set of chemical probes for the study of ketoreductase domains of polyketide synthases. This chemical tool-based approach was validated using the ketoreductase of pikromycin module 2 (PikKR2) as a model system. Triketide substrate mimics 12 and 13 were designed to increase stability (incorporating a nonhydrolyzable thioether linkage) and minimize nonessential functionality (truncating the phosphopantetheinyl arm). PikKR2 reduction product identities as well as steady-state kinetic parameters were determined by a combination of LC-MS/MS analysis of synthetic standards and a NADPH consumption assay. The d-hydroxyl product is consistent with bioinformatic analysis and results from a complementary biochemical and molecular biological approach. When compared to widely employed substrates in previous studies, diketide 63 and trans-decalone 64, substrates 12 and 13 showed 2–10 fold lower KM values (2.4 ± 0.8 and 7.8 ± 2.7 mM, respectively), indicating molecular recognition of intermediate-like substrates. Due to an abundance of the nonreducable enol-tautomer, the kcat values were attenuated by as much as 15–336 fold relative to known substrates. This study reveals the high stereoselectivity of PikKR2 in the face of gross substrate permutation, highlighting the utility of a chemical probe-based approach in the study of polyketide ketoreductases.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Functional Characterization of a Dehydratase Domain from the Pikromycin Polyketide Synthase

Yang Li; Greg J. Dodge; William D. Fiers; Robert A. Fecik; Janet L. Smith; Courtney C. Aldrich

Metabolic engineering of polyketide synthase (PKS) pathways represents a promising approach to natural products discovery. The dehydratase (DH) domains of PKSs, which generate an α,β-unsaturated bond through a dehydration reaction, have been poorly studied compared with other domains, likely because of the simple nature of the chemical reaction they catalyze and the lack of a convenient assay to measure substrate turnover. Herein we report the first steady-state kinetic analysis of a PKS DH domain employing LC-MS/MS analysis for product quantitation. PikDH2 was selected as a model DH domain. Its substrate specificity and mechanism were interrogated with a systematic series of synthetic triketide substrates containing a nonhydrolyzable thioether linkage as well as by site-directed mutagenesis, evaluation of the pH dependence of the catalytic efficiency (V(max)/K(M)), and kinetic characterization of a mechanism-based inhibitor. These studies revealed that PikDH2 converts d-alcohol substrates to trans-olefin products. The reaction is reversible with equilibrium constants ranging from 1.2 to 2. Moreover, the enzyme activity is robust, and PikDH2 was used on a preparative scale for the chemoenzymatic synthesis of unsaturated triketide products. PikDH2 was shown to possess remarkably strict substrate specificity and is unable to turn over substrates that are epimeric at the β-, γ-, or δ-position. We also demonstrated that PikDH2 has a key ionizable group with a pK(a) of 7.0 and can be irreversibly inactivated through covalent modification by a mechanism-based inhibitor, which provides a foundation for future structural studies to elucidate substrate-protein interactions.


ChemBioChem | 2008

Generation of novel pikromycin antibiotic products through mutasynthesis.

Shuchi Gupta; Venkatraman Lakshmanan; Beom Seok Kim; Robert A. Fecik; Kevin A. Reynolds

The pikromycin polyketide synthase (PKS) of S. venezuelae, which consists of one loading module and six extension modules, is responsible for the formation of the hexaketide narbonolide, a key intermediate in the biosynthesis of the antibiotic pikromycin. S. venezuelae strains in which PikAI, which houses the loading domain and first two modules of the PKS, is either absent or catalytically inactive, produce no pikromycin product. When these strains are grown in the presence of a synthetically prepared triketide product, activated as the N‐acetylcysteamine thioester, pikromycin yields are restored to as much as 11 % of that seen in the wild‐type strain. Feeding analogues of the triketide intermediate provides pikromycin analogues bearing different alkyl substituents at C13 and C14. One of these analogues, Δ15,16‐dehydropikromycin, exhibits improved antimicrobial activity relative to pikromycin.


Chemical Science | 2015

Tylosin polyketide synthase module 3: stereospecificity, stereoselectivity and steady-state kinetic analysis of β-processing domains via diffusible, synthetic substrates.

William D. Fiers; Greg J. Dodge; Yang Li; Janet L. Smith; Robert A. Fecik; Courtney C. Aldrich

Natural and modified substrates coupled with LC-MS/MS analysis of products revealed the stereospecificity and stereoselectivity of a polyketide didomain.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

A general scheme for synthesis of substrate-based polyketide labels for acyl carrier proteins.

Erick K. Leggans; David L. Akey; Janet L. Smith; Robert A. Fecik

A general strategy to enzymatically label acyl carrier proteins (ACPs) of polyketide synthases has been developed. Incorporation of a chloromethyl ketone or vinyl ketone moiety into polyketide chain elongation intermediate mimics allows for the synthesis of CoA adducts. These CoA adducts undergo enzymatic reaction with Sfp, a phosphopantetheinyl transferase, to afford labeled CurB carrier proteins.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2007

Natural product biosynthesis moves in vitro

Robert A. Fecik

Heterologous production of natural products in non-native bacteria can be used to increase yields of certain bioactive compounds; however, producing small molecules inside bacteria has numerous limitations. Two reports of the in vitro reconstruction of entire biosynthetic pathways highlight the advantages and challenges of this approach for pathway engineering.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2006

Structural basis for macrolactonization by the pikromycin thioesterase

David L. Akey; John W Giraldes; Robert A. Fecik; David H. Sherman; Janet L. Smith

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Yang Li

University of Minnesota

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Dan L. Sackett

National Institutes of Health

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