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Dive into the research topics where Timothy J. Rydel is active.

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Featured researches published by Timothy J. Rydel.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2008

Characterization and crystal structure of lysine insensitive Corynebacterium glutamicum dihydrodipicolinate synthase (cDHDPS) protein

Elena A. Rice; Gary A. Bannon; Kevin C. Glenn; Soon Seog Jeong; Eric J. Sturman; Timothy J. Rydel

The lysine insensitive Corynebacterium glutamicum dihydrodipicolinate synthase enzyme (cDHDPS) was recently successfully introduced into maize plants to enhance the level of lysine in the grain. To better understand lysine insensitivity of the cDHDPS, we expressed, purified, kinetically characterized the protein, and solved its X-ray crystal structure. The cDHDPS enzyme has a fold and overall structure that is highly similar to other DHDPS proteins. A noteworthy feature of the active site is the evidence that the catalytic lysine residue forms a Schiff base adduct with pyruvate. Analyses of the cDHDPS structure in the vicinity of the putative binding site for S-lysine revealed that the allosteric binding site in the Escherichia coli DHDPS protein does not exist in cDHDPS due to three non-conservative amino acids substitutions, and this is likely why cDHDPS is not feedback inhibited by lysine.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

Dicamba Monooxygenase: Structural Insights into a Dynamic Rieske Oxygenase that Catalyzes an Exocyclic Monooxygenation☆

Robert L. D'ordine; Timothy J. Rydel; Michael J. Storek; Eric J. Sturman; Farhad Moshiri; Ryan K. Bartlett; Gregory R. Brown; Robert J. Eilers; Crystal L. Dart; Youlin Qi; Stanislaw Flasinski; Sonya J. Franklin

Dicamba (2-methoxy-3,6-dichlorobenzoic acid) O-demethylase (DMO) is the terminal Rieske oxygenase of a three-component system that includes a ferredoxin and a reductase. It catalyzes the NADH-dependent oxidative demethylation of the broad leaf herbicide dicamba. DMO represents the first crystal structure of a Rieske non-heme iron oxygenase that performs an exocyclic monooxygenation, incorporating O(2) into a side-chain moiety and not a ring system. The structure reveals a 3-fold symmetric trimer (alpha(3)) in the crystallographic asymmetric unit with similar arrangement of neighboring inter-subunit Rieske domain and non-heme iron site enabling electron transport consistent with other structurally characterized Rieske oxygenases. While the Rieske domain is similar, differences are observed in the catalytic domain, which is smaller in sequence length than those described previously, yet possessing an active-site cavity of larger volume when compared to oxygenases with larger substrates. Consistent with the amphipathic substrate, the active site is designed to interact with both the carboxylate and aromatic ring with both key polar and hydrophobic interactions observed. DMO structures were solved with and without substrate (dicamba), product (3,6-dichlorosalicylic acid), and either cobalt or iron in the non-heme iron site. The substitution of cobalt for iron revealed an uncommon mode of non-heme iron binding trapped by the non-catalytic Co(2+), which, we postulate, may be transiently present in the native enzyme during the catalytic cycle. Thus, we present four DMO structures with resolutions ranging from 1.95 to 2.2 A, which, in sum, provide a snapshot of a dynamic enzyme where metal binding and substrate binding are coupled to observed structural changes in the non-heme iron and catalytic sites.


Nature Communications | 2016

A transgenic approach for controlling Lygus in cotton

Anilkumar Gowda; Timothy J. Rydel; Andrew M. Wollacott; Robert S. Brown; Waseem Akbar; Thomas L. Clark; Stanislaw Flasinski; Jeffrey R. Nageotte; Andrew C. Read; Xiaohong Shi; Brent J. Werner; Michael Pleau; James A. Baum

Lygus species of plant-feeding insects have emerged as economically important pests of cotton in the United States. These species are not controlled by commercial Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) cotton varieties resulting in economic losses and increased application of insecticide. Previously, a Bt crystal protein (Cry51Aa2) was reported with insecticidal activity against Lygus spp. However, transgenic cotton plants expressing this protein did not exhibit effective protection from Lygus feeding damage. Here we employ various optimization strategies, informed in part by protein crystallography and modelling, to identify limited amino-acid substitutions in Cry51Aa2 that increase insecticidal activity towards Lygus spp. by >200-fold. Transgenic cotton expressing the variant protein, Cry51Aa2.834_16, reduce populations of Lygus spp. up to 30-fold in whole-plant caged field trials. One transgenic event, designated MON88702, has been selected for further development of cotton varieties that could potentially reduce or eliminate insecticide application for control of Lygus and the associated environmental impacts. Plant-feeding insects of the Lygus genus have emerged as a major pest effecting cotton crops in the USA. Here the authors optimize the insecticidal activity of a Bacillus thuringiensis crystal protein and produce transgenic plants that are resistant to feeding damage by Lygusspecies.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2012

The enzymology of alanine aminotransferase (AlaAT) isoforms from Hordeum vulgare and other organisms, and the HvAlaAT crystal structure.

Stephen M.G. Duff; Timothy J. Rydel; Amanda L. McClerren; Wenlan Zhang; Jimmy Y. Li; Eric J. Sturman; Coralie Halls; Songyang Chen; Jiamin Zeng; Jiexin Peng; Crystal N. Kretzler; Artem G. Evdokimov

In this paper we describe the expression, purification, kinetics and biophysical characterization of alanine aminotransferase (AlaAT) from the barley plant (Hordeum vulgare). This dimeric PLP-dependent enzyme is a pivotal element of several key metabolic pathways from nitrogen assimilation to carbon metabolism, and its introduction into transgenic plants results in increased yield. The enzyme exhibits a bi-bi ping-pong reaction mechanism with a K(m) for alanine, 2-oxoglutarate, glutamate and pyruvate of 3.8, 0.3, 0.8 and 0.2 mM, respectively. Barley AlaAT catalyzes the forward (alanine-forming) reaction with a k(cat) of 25.6 s(-1), the reverse (glutamate-forming) reaction with k(cat) of 12.1 s(-1) and an equilibrium constant of ~0.5. The enzyme is also able to utilize aspartate and oxaloacetate with ~10% efficiency as compared to the native substrates, which makes it much more specific than related bacterial/archaeal enzymes (that also have lower K(m) values). We have crystallized barley AlaAT in complex with PLP and l-cycloserine and solved the structure of this complex at 2.7 Å resolution. This is the first example of a plant AlaAT structure, and it reveals a canonical aminotransferase fold similar to structures of the Thermotoga maritima, Pyrococcus furiosus, and human enzymes. This structure bridges our structural understanding of AlaAT mechanism between three kingdoms of life and allows us to shed some light on the specifics of the catalysis performed by these proteins.


Biochemistry | 2003

The crystal structure, mutagenesis, and activity studies reveal that patatin is a lipid acyl hydrolase with a Ser-Asp catalytic dyad.

Timothy J. Rydel; Jennifer M. Williams; Elysia K. Krieger; Farhad Moshiri; William C. Stallings; Sherri M. Brown; Jay C. Pershing; John P. Purcell; Murtaza F. Alibhai


Archive | 2001

Insect inhibitory lipid acyl hydrolases

Murtaza F. Alibhai; Timothy J. Rydel


Archive | 2012

Pesticidal Nucleic Acids and Proteins and Uses Thereof

David Bowen; Gregory J. Bunkers; Catherine A. Chay; John W. Pitkin; Timothy J. Rydel; Eric J. Sturman; Uma Sukuru; Brook Van Scoyoc


Archive | 2008

Dmo methods and compositions

Robert L. D'ordine; Leigh H. English; Farhad Moshiri; Timothy J. Rydel; Michael J. Storek; Eric J. Sturman


Archive | 2013

Proteins toxic to hemipteran insect species

James A. Baum; Artem G. Evdokimov; Farhad Moshiri; Timothy J. Rydel; Eric J. Sturman; Moritz von Rechenberg; Halong Vu; Andrew M. Wollacott; Meiying Zheng


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2016

Mechanistic insights into the first Lygus-active β-pore forming protein

Agoston Jerga; Danqi Chen; Chunfen Zhang; Jinping Fu; Jean-Louis K. Kouadio; Stephen M.G. Duff; Jennifer E. Howard; Timothy J. Rydel; Artem G. Evdokimov; Parthasarathy Ramaseshadri; Adam J. Evans; Renata Bolognesi; Yoonseong Park; Jeffrey A. Haas

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