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Featured researches published by William Arnold.


Biophysical Journal | 1998

A Carbon-13 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic Study of Inter-Proton Pair Order Parameters: A New Approach to Study Order and Dynamics in Phospholipid Membrane Systems

Julio A. Urbina; Benjamin Moreno; William Arnold; Christopher H. Taron; Peter Orlean; Eric Oldfield

We report a simple new nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopic method to investigate order and dynamics in phospholipids in which inter-proton pair order parameters are derived by using high resolution 13C cross-polarization/magic angle spinning (CP/MAS) NMR combined with 1H dipolar echo preparation. The resulting two-dimensional NMR spectra permit determination of the motionally averaged interpair second moment for protons attached to each resolved 13C site, from which the corresponding interpair order parameters can be deducted. A spin-lock mixing pulse before cross-polarization enables the detection of spin diffusion amongst the different regions of the lipid molecules. The method was applied to a variety of model membrane systems, including 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC)/sterol and 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC)/sterol model membranes. The results agree well with previous studies using specifically deuterium labeled or predeuterated phospholipid molecules. It was also found that efficient spin diffusion takes place within the phospholipid acyl chains, and between the glycerol backbone and choline headgroup of these molecules. The experiment was also applied to biosynthetically 13C-labeled ergosterol incorporated into phosphatidylcholine bilayers. These results indicate highly restricted motions of both the sterol nucleus and the aliphatic side chain, and efficient spin exchange between these structurally dissimilar regions of the sterol molecule. Finally, studies were carried out in the lamellar liquid crystalline (L alpha) and inverted hexagonal (HII) phases of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DOPE). These results indicated that phosphatidylethanolamine lamellar phases are more ordered than the equivalent phases of phosphatidylcholines. In the HII (inverted hexagonal) phase, despite the increased translational freedom, there is highly constrained packing of the lipid molecules, particularly in the acyl chain region.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2016

Orthogonal Assays Clarify the Oxidative Biochemistry of Taxol P450 CYP725A4

Bradley Walters Biggs; John Edward Rouck; Amogh Kambalyal; William Arnold; Chin Giaw Lim; Marjan De Mey; Courtney M. Starks; Aditi Das; Parayil Kumaran Ajikumar

Natural product metabolic engineering potentially offers sustainable and affordable access to numerous valuable molecules. However, challenges in characterizing and assembling complex biosynthetic pathways have prevented more rapid progress in this field. The anticancer agent Taxol represents an excellent case study. Assembly of a biosynthetic pathway for Taxol has long been stalled at its first functionalization, putatively an oxygenation performed by the cytochrome P450 CYP725A4, due to confounding characterizations. Here, through combined in vivo (Escherichia coli), in vitro (lipid nanodisc), and metabolite stability assays, we verify the presence and likely cause of this enzymes inherent promiscuity. Thereby, we remove the possibility that promiscuity simply existed as an artifact of previous metabolic engineering approaches. Further, spontaneous rearrangement and the stabilizing effect of a hydrophobic overlay suggest a potential role for nonenzymatic chemistry in Taxols biosynthesis. Taken together, this work confirms taxadiene-5α-ol as a primary enzymatic product of CYP725A4 and provides direction for future Taxol metabolic and protein engineering efforts.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1999

NITROGEN-CONTAINING BISPHOSPHONATES AS CARBOCATION TRANSITION STATE ANALOGS FOR ISOPRENOID BIOSYNTHESIS

Michael B. Martin; William Arnold; Huel T. Heath; Julio A. Urbina; Eric Oldfield


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1996

19F Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Chemical Shifts of Fluorine Containing Aliphatic Amino Acids in Proteins: Studies on Lactobacillus casei Dihydrofolate Reductase Containing (2S,4S)-5-Fluoroleucine‖

James Feeney; John E McCormick; Christopher J Bauer; Berry Birdsall; Claire M. Moody; Bernard A. Starkmann; Douglas W. Young; Peter S. Francis; Robert H. Havlin; William Arnold; Eric Oldfield


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2000

Experimental, Hartree-Fock, and Density Functional Theory Investigations of the Charge Density, Dipole Moment, Electrostatic Potential, and Electric Field Gradients in L-Asparagine Monohydrate

William Arnold; Lori K. Sanders; Michael T. McMahon; Anatoliy Volkov; Guang Wu; Philip Coppens; Scott R. Wilson; Nathalie Godbout; Eric Oldfield


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1998

An Experimental and Density Functional Theoretical Investigation of Iron-57 Mössbauer Quadrupole Splittings in Organometallic and Heme-Model Compounds: Applications to Carbonmonoxy-Heme Protein Structure†

Robert H. Havlin; Nathalie Godbout; Renzo Salzmann; Mark Wojdelski; William Arnold; Charles E. Schulz; Eric Oldfield


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2000

Computation of through-space 19F-19F scalar couplings via density functional theory

William Arnold; Junhong Mao; Haihong Sun; Eric Oldfield


Journal of Porphyrins and Phthalocyanines | 2001

NMR, IR, Mossbauer and quantum chemical investigations of metalloporphyrins and metalloproteins

Lori K. Sanders; William Arnold; Eric Oldfield


Biophysical Journal | 1972

The Ratio between Delayed Light and Fluorescence Emitted by Chloroplasts

William Arnold


Macromolecules | 2002

Chain packing in ethoxyphenyl-polycarbonate by 13C{2H} redor

Robert D. O'Connor; Jeffery A. Byers; William Arnold; Eric Oldfield; Karen L. Wooley; Jacob Schaefer

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Chin Giaw Lim

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Courtney M. Starks

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Guang Wu

University at Buffalo

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Jacob Schaefer

Washington University in St. Louis

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Jeffery A. Byers

Washington University in St. Louis

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