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Featured researches published by Tzu-Pin Wang.


Journal of Microbiology Immunology and Infection | 2014

Stenotrophomonas maltophilia bloodstream infection: Comparison between community-onset and hospital-acquired infections

Ya-Ting Chang; Chun-Yu Lin; Po-Liang Lu; Chung-Chih Lai; Tun-Chieh Chen; Chi-Yu Chen; Deng-Chyang Wu; Tzu-Pin Wang; Chiu-Mei Lin; Wei-Ru Lin; Yen-Hsu Chen

BACKGROUND/PURPOSE Stenotrophomonas maltophilia has been recognized as an important nosocomial pathogen, but few reports have discussed S. maltophilia infection in the community settings. This study aimed to reveal characteristics of patients with community-onset S. maltophilia bloodstream infection (SMBSI), to specify the subgroup of healthcare-associated (HCA) infection in the community-onset group and to compare them with hospital-acquired (HA) SMBSI patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS Medical charts of adult patients with SMBSI presenting to a medical center in southern Taiwan from May 2008 to October 2011 were reviewed and analyzed retrospectively. RESULTS Among 153 patients, we observed a high percentage (38.6%) of SMBSI to be community onset. Among community-onset SMBSI, 45.8% were community-acquired (CA) and 54.2% were HCA. The crude mortality rates were 11.1%, 18.8%, and 60.6% in the CA, HCA, and HA groups, respectively. Structural/mechanical abnormalities were observed in 32.7% of all cases, and 60% of those were related to malignancy. Independent risk factors for mortality in community-onset SMBSI were liver cirrhosis, liver metastasis, and a high Pitt bacteremia score, whereas structural/mechanical abnormalities and a high Pitt bacteremia score related to increased mortality in HA SMBSI. CONCLUSION Community-onset S. maltophilia infection deserves attention. Patients with community-onset SMBSI have reduced disease severity and lower mortality rate when compared to HA SMBSI. Underlying structural/mechanical abnormalities, especially those caused by malignancies, are common in SMBSI cases and should be investigated when bacteremia occurs.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2010

Versatile Phosphoramidation Reactions for Nucleic Acid Conjugations with Peptides, Proteins, Chromophores, and Biotin Derivatives

Tzu-Pin Wang; Yi-Jang Chiou; Yi Chen; Eng-Chi Wang; Long-Chih Hwang; Bing Hung Chen; Yen-Hsu Chen; Chun-Han Ko

Chemical conjugations of nucleic acids with macromolecules or small molecules are common approaches to study nucleic acids in chemistry and biology and to exploit nucleic acids for medical applications. The conjugation of nucleic acids such as oligonucleotides with peptides is especially useful to circumvent cell delivery and specificity problems of oligonucleotides as therapeutic agents. However, current approaches are limited and inefficient in their ability to afford peptide-oligonucleotide conjugates (POCs). Here, we report an effective and reproducible approach to prepare POCs and other nucleic acid conjugates based on a newly developed nucleic acid phosphoramidation method. The development of a new nucleic acid phosphoramidation reaction was achieved by our successful synthesis of a novel amine-containing biotin derivative used to systematically optimize the reactions. The improved phosphoramidation reactions dramatically increased yields of nucleic acid-biotin conjugates up to 80% after 3 h reaction. Any nucleic acids with a terminal phosphate group are suitable reactants in phosphoramidation reactions to conjugate with amine-containing molecules such as biotin and fluorescein derivatives, proteins, and, most importantly, peptides to enable the synthesis of POCs for therapeutic applications. Polymerase chain reactions (PCRs) to study incorporation of biotin or fluorescein-tagged DNA primers into the reaction products demonstrated that appropriate controls of nucleic acid phosphoramidation reactions incur minimum adverse effects on inherited base-pairing characteristics of nucleotides in nucleic acids. The phosphoramidation approach preserves the integrity of hybridization specificity in nucleic acids when preparing POCs. By retaining integrity of the nucleic acids, their effectiveness as therapeutic reagents for gene silencing, gene therapy, and RNA interference is ensured. The potential for POC use was demonstrated by two-step phosphoramidation reactions to successfully synthesize nucleic acid-tetraglycine conjugates. In addition, phosphoramidation reactions provided a facile approach to prepare nucleic acid-BSA conjugates with good yields. In summary, the new approach to phosphoramidation reactions offers a universal method to prepare POCs and other nucleic acid conjugates with high yields in aqueous solutions. The methods can be easily adapted to typical chemistry or biology laboratory setups which will expedite the applications of POCs for basic research and medicine.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

Theoretical study of the protonation of the one-electron-reduced guanine-cytosine base pair by water.

Sodio C. N. Hsu; Tzu-Pin Wang; Chai-Lin Kao; Hui-Fen Chen; Po-Yu Yang; Hsing-Yin Chen

Prototropic equilibria in ionized DNA play an important role in charge transport and radiation damage of DNA and, therefore, continue to attract considerable attention. Although it is well-established that electron attachment will induce an interbase proton transfer from N1 of guanine (G) to N3 of cytosine (C), the question of whether the surrounding water in the major and minor grooves can protonate the one-electron-reduced G:C base pair still remains open. In this work, density functional theory (DFT) calculations were employed to investigate the energetics and mechanism for the protonation of the one-electron-reduced G:C base pair by water. Through the calculations of thermochemical cycles, the protonation free energies were estimated to be in the range of 11.6-14.2 kcal/mol. The calculations for the models of C(•-)(H(2)O)(8) and G(-H1)(-)(H(2)O)(16), which were used to simulate the detailed processes of protonation by water before and after the interbase proton transfer, respectively, revealed that the protonation proceeds through a concerted double proton transfer involving the water molecules in the first and second hydration shells. Comparing the present results with the rates of interbase proton transfer and charge transfer along DNA suggests that protonation on the C(•-) moiety is not competitive with interbase proton transfer, but the possibility of protonation on the G(-H1)(-) moiety after interbase proton transfer cannot be excluded. Electronic-excited-state calculations were also carried out by the time-dependent DFT approach. This information is valuable for experimental identification in the future.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2012

Advanced Aqueous-Phase Phosphoramidation Reactions for Effectively Synthesizing Peptide–Oligonucleotide Conjugates Trafficked into a Human Cell Line

Tzu-Pin Wang; Ni Chien Ko; Yu-Chih Su; Eng-Chi Wang; Scott Severance; Chi-Ching Hwang; Ying Ting Shih; Min Hui Wu; Yen-Hsu Chen

Peptide-oligonucleotide conjugates (POCs) have held promise as effective therapeutic agents in treating microbial infections and human genetic diseases including cancers. In clinical applications, POCs are especially useful to circumvent cellular delivery and specificity problems of oligonucleotides. We previously reported that nucleic acid phosphoramidation reactions performed in aqueous solutions have the potential for facile POC synthesis. Here, we carried out further studies to significantly improve aqueous-phase two-step phosphoramidation reaction yield. Optimized reactions were employed to effectively synthesize POCs for delivery into human A549 cells. We achieved optimization of aqueous-phase two-step phosphoramidation reaction and improved reaction yield by (1) determining appropriate co-solutes and co-solute concentrations to acquire higher reaction yields, (2) exploring a different nucleophilicity of imidazole and its derivatives to stabilize essential nucleic acid phosphorimidazolide intermediates prior to POC formation, and (3) enhancing POC synthesis by increasing reactant nucleophilicity. The advanced two-step phosphoramidation reaction was exploited to effectively conjugate a well-studied cell penetrating peptide, the Tat(48-57) peptide, with oligonucleotides, bridged by either no linkers or a disulfide-containing linker, to have the corresponding POC yields of 47-75%. Phosphoramidation-synthesized POCs showed no cytotoxicity to human A549 cells at studied POC concentrations after 24 h inoculation and were successfully trafficked into the human A549 cell line as demonstrated by flow cytometry, fluorescent microscopy, and confocal laser scanning microscopy study. The current report provides insight into aqueous-phase phosphoramidation reactions, the knowledge of which was used to develop effective strategies for synthesizing POCs with crucial applications including therapeutic agents for medicine.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2012

Development of a Gd(III)-Based Receptor-Induced Magnetization Enhancement (RIME) Contrast Agent for β‑Glucuronidase Activity Profiling

Shih-Hsien Chen; Yu-Ting Kuo; Gyan Singh; Tian-Lu Cheng; Y. C. Su; Tzu-Pin Wang; Yen-Yu Chiu; Jui-Jen Lai; Chih-Ching Chang; Twei-Shiun Jaw; Shey-Cherng Tzou; Gin-Chung Liu; Yun-Ming Wang

β-Glucuronidase is a key lysosomal enzyme and is often overexpressed in necrotic tumor masses. We report here the synthesis of a pro receptor-induced magnetization enhancement (pro-RIME) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent ([Gd(DOTA-FPβGu)]) for molecular imaging of β-glucuronidase activity in tumor tissues. The contrast agent consists of two parts, a gadolinium complex and a β-glucuronidase substrate (β-d-glucopyranuronic acid). The binding association constant (KA) of [Gd(DOTA-FPβGu)] is 7.42 × 10(2), which is significantly lower than that of a commercially available MS-325 (KA = 3.0 × 10(4)) RIME contrast agent. The low KA value of [Gd(DOTA-FPβGu)] is due to the pendant β-d-glucopyranuronic acid moiety. Therefore, [Gd(DOTA-FPβGu)] can be used for detection of β-glucuronidase through RIME modulation. The detail mechanism of enzymatic activation of [Gd(DOTA-FPβGu)] was elucidated by LC-MS. The kinetics of β-glucuronidase catalyzed hydrolysis of [Eu(DOTA-FPβGu)] at pH 7.4 best fit the Miechalis-Menten kinetic mode with Km = 1.38 mM, kcat = 3.76 × 10(3), and kcat/Km = 2.72 × 10(3) M(-1) s(-1). The low Km value indicates high affinity of β-glucuronidase for [Gd(DOTA-FPβGu)] at physiological pH. Relaxometric studies revealed that T1 relaxivity of [Gd(DOTA-FPβGu)] changes in response to the concentration of β-glucuronidase. Consistent with the relaxometric studies, [Gd(DOTA-FPβGu)] showed significant change in MR image signal in the presence of β-glucuronidase and HSA. In vitro and in vivo MR images demonstrated appreciable differences in signal enhancement in the cell lines and tumor xenografts in accordance to their expression levels of β-glucuronidase.


Biochemistry | 2012

In Vitro Selection and Characterization of a Novel Zn(II)-Dependent Phosphorothiolate Thiolesterase Ribozyme

Tzu-Pin Wang; Yu-Chih Su; Yi Chen; Yi-Ming Liou; Kun-Liang Lin; Eng-Chi Wang; Long-Chih Hwang; Yun-Ming Wang; Yen-Hsu Chen

Here we present the in vitro selection of a novel ribozyme specific for Zn2+-dependent catalysis on hydrolysis of a phosphorothiolate thiolester bond. The ribozyme, called the TW17 ribozyme, was evolved and selected from an artificial RNA pool covalently linked to a biotin-containing substrate through the phosphorothiolate thiolester bond. The secondary structure for the evolved ribozyme consisted of three major helices and three loops. Biochemical and chemical studies of ribozyme-catalyzed reaction products provided evidence that the ribozyme specifically catalyzes hydrolysis of the phosphorothiolate thiolester linkage. A successful ribozyme construct with active catalysis in trans further supported the determined ribozyme structure and indicated the potential of the ribozyme for multiple-substrate turnover. The ribozyme also requires Zn2+ and Mg2+ for maximal catalysis. The TW17 ribozyme, in the presence of Zn2+ and Mg2+, conferred a rate enhancement of at least 5 orders of magnitude when compared to the estimated rate of the uncatalyzed reaction. The ribozyme completely lost catalytic activity in the absence of Zn2+, like Zn2+-dependent protein hydrolases. The discovery and characterization of the TW17 ribozyme suggest additional roles for Zn2+ in ribozyme catalysts.


RSC Advances | 2018

Corroboration of Zn(II)–Mg(II)-tertiary structure interplays essential for the optimal catalysis of a phosphorothiolate thiolesterase ribozyme

Tzu-Pin Wang; Yu-Chih Su; Yi Chen; Scott Severance; Chi-Ching Hwang; Yi-Ming Liou; Chia-Hui Lu; Kun-Liang Lin; Rui Jing Zhu; Eng-Chi Wang

The TW17 ribozyme, a catalytic RNA selected from a pool of artificial RNA, is specific for the Zn2+-dependent hydrolysis of a phosphorothiolate thiolester bond. Here, we describe the organic synthesis of both guanosine α-thio-monophosphate and the substrates required for selecting and characterizing the TW17 ribozyme, and for deciphering the catalytic mechanism of the ribozyme. By successively substituting the substrate originally conjugated to the RNA pool with structurally modified substrates, we demonstrated that the TW17 ribozyme specifically catalyzes phosphorothiolate thiolester hydrolysis. Metal titration studies of TW17 ribozyme catalysis in the presence of Zn2+ alone, Zn2+ and Mg2+, and Zn2+ and [Co(NH3)6]3+ supported our findings that Zn2+ is absolutely required for ribozyme catalysis, and indicated that optimal ribozyme catalysis involves the presence of outer-sphere and one inner-sphere Mg2+. A survey of the TW17 ribozyme activity at various pHs revealed that the activity of the ribozyme critically depends on the alkaline conditions. Moreover, a GNRA tetraloop-containing ribozyme constructed with active catalysis in trans provided catalysis and multiple substrate turnover efficiencies significantly higher than ribozymes lacking a GNRA tetraloop. This research supports the essential roles of Zn2+, Mg2+, and a GNRA tetraloop in modulating the TW17 ribozyme structure for optimal ribozyme catalysis, leading also to the formulation of a proposed reaction mechanism for TW17 ribozyme catalysis.


Biochemistry | 2002

Spectroscopic Characterization and O2 Reactivity of the Trinuclear Cu Cluster of Mutants of the Multicopper Oxidase Fet3p

Amy E. Palmer; Liliana Quintanar; Scott Severance; Tzu-Pin Wang; Daniel J. Kosman; Edward I. Solomon


Biochemistry | 2005

Role of aspartate 94 in the decay of the peroxide intermediate in the multicopper oxidase Fet3p

Liliana Quintanar; Christopher S. Stoj; Tzu-Pin Wang; Daniel J. Kosman; Edward I. Solomon


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2004

Ferrous Binding to the Multicopper Oxidases Saccharomyces cerevisiae Fet3p and Human Ceruloplasmin: Contributions to Ferroxidase Activity

Liliana Quintanar; Mark Gebhard; Tzu-Pin Wang; Daniel J. Kosman; Edward I. Solomon

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Eng-Chi Wang

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Po-Yuan Chen

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Yun-Ming Wang

National Chiao Tung University

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Yen-Hsu Chen

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Yu-Chih Su

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Chi-Ching Hwang

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Min Hui Wu

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Sie-Rong Li

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Chai-Lin Kao

Kaohsiung Medical University

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