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Dive into the research topics where William T. Jewell is active.

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Featured researches published by William T. Jewell.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2012

Enhancing Peptide Ligand Binding to Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor by Covalent Bond Formation

Bernadette V. Marquez; Heather E. Beck; Tolulope A. Aweda; Brett S. Phinney; Cynthia M. Holsclaw; William T. Jewell; Diana Tran; Jeffrey J. Day; Malalage N. Peiris; Charles C. Nwosu; Carlito B. Lebrilla; Claude F. Meares

Formation of a stable covalent bond between a synthetic probe molecule and a specific site on a target protein has many potential applications in biomedical science. For example, the properties of probes used as receptor-imaging ligands may be improved by increasing their residence time on the targeted receptor. Among the more interesting cases are peptide ligands, the strongest of which typically bind to receptors with micromolar dissociation constants, and which may depend on processes other than simple binding to provide images. The side chains of cysteine, histidine, or lysine are attractive for chemical attachment to improve binding to a receptor protein, and a system based on acryloyl probes attaching to engineered cysteine provides excellent positron emission tomographic images in animal models (Wei et al. (2008) J. Nucl. Med. 49, 1828-1835). In nature, lysine is a more common but less reactive residue than cysteine, making it an interesting challenge to modify. To seek practically useful cross-linking yields with naturally occurring lysine side chains, we have explored not only acryloyl but also other reactive linkers with different chemical properties. We employed a peptide-VEGF model system to discover that a 19mer peptide ligand, which carried a lysine-tagged dinitrofluorobenzene group, became attached stably and with good yield to a unique lysine residue on human vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), even in the presence of 70% fetal bovine serum. The same peptide carrying acryloyl and related Michael acceptors gave low yields of attachment to VEGF, as did the chloroacetyl peptide.


Chemico-Biological Interactions | 2012

Analysis of naphthalene adduct binding sites in model proteins by tandem mass spectrometry

Nathalie T. Pham; William T. Jewell; Dexter Morin; Alan R. Buckpitt

The electrophilic metabolites of the polyaromatic hydrocarbon naphthalene have been shown to bind covalently to proteins and covalent adduct formation correlates with the cytotoxic effects of the chemical in the respiratory system. Although 1,2-naphthalene epoxide, naphthalene diol epoxide, 1,2-naphthoquinone, and 1,4-napthoquinone have been identified as reactive metabolites of interest, the role of each metabolite in total covalent protein adduction and subsequent cytotoxicity remains to be established. To better understand the target residues associated with the reaction of these metabolites with proteins, mass spectrometry was used to identify adducted residues following (1) incubation of metabolites with actin and protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), and (2) activation of naphthalene in microsomal incubations containing supplemental actin or PDI. All four reactive metabolites bound to Cys, Lys or His residues in actin and PDI. Cys₁₇ of actin was the only residue adducted by all metabolites; there was substantial metabolite selectivity for the majority of adducted residues. Modifications of actin and PDI, following microsomal incubations containing ¹⁴C-naphthalene, were detected readily by 2D gel electrophoresis and phosphor imaging. However, target modifications on tryptic peptides from these isolated proteins could not be readily detected by MALDI/TOF/TOF and only three modified peptides were detected using high resolution-selective ion monitoring (HR-SIM). All the reactive metabolites investigated have the potential to modify several residues in a single protein, but even in tissues with very high rates of naphthalene activation, the extent of modification was too low to allow unambiguous identification of a significant number of modified residues in the isolated proteins.


Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2008

Measurement of protein sulfhydryls in response to cellular oxidative stress using gel electrophoresis and multiplexed fluorescent imaging analysis.

Page C. Spiess; Dexter Morin; William T. Jewell; Alan R. Buckpitt

The significance of free radicals in biology has been established by numerous investigations spanning a period of over 40 years. Whereas there are many intracellular targets for these radical species, the importance of cysteine thiol posttranslational modification has received considerable attention. The current studies present a highly sensitive method for measurement of the posttranslational modification of protein thiols. This method is based on labeling of proteins with monofunctional maleimide dyes followed by 2D gel electrophoresis to separate proteins and multiplexed fluorescent imaging analysis. The method correctly interrogates the thiol/disulfide ratio present in commercially available proteins. Exposure of pulmonary airway epithelial cells to high concentrations of menadione or t-butyl hydroperoxide resulted in the modification of cysteines in more than 141 proteins of which 60 were subsequently identified by MALDI-TOF/TOF MS. Although some proteins were modified similarly by these two oxidants, several showed detectably different maleimide ratios in response to these two agents. Proteins that were modified by one or both oxidants include those involved in transcription, protein synthesis and folding, and cell death/growth. In conclusion, these studies provide a novel procedure for measuring the redox status of cysteine thiols on individual proteins with a clearly demonstrated applicability to interactions of chemicals with pulmonary epithelial cells.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Characterization of model peptide adducts with reactive metabolites of naphthalene by mass spectrometry

Nathalie T. Pham; William T. Jewell; Dexter Morin; A. Daniel Jones; Alan R. Buckpitt

Naphthalene is a volatile polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon generated during combustion and is a ubiquitous chemical in the environment. Short term exposures of rodents to air concentrations less than the current OSHA standard yielded necrotic lesions in the airways and nasal epithelium of the mouse, and in the nasal epithelium of the rat. The cytotoxic effects of naphthalene have been correlated with the formation of covalent protein adducts after the generation of reactive metabolites, but there is little information about the specific sites of adduction or on the amino acid targets of these metabolites. To better understand the chemical species produced when naphthalene metabolites react with proteins and peptides, we studied the formation and structure of the resulting adducts from the incubation of model peptides with naphthalene epoxide, naphthalene diol epoxide, 1,2-naphthoquinone, and 1,4-naphthoquinone using high resolution mass spectrometry. Identification of the binding sites, relative rates of depletion of the unadducted peptide, and selectivity of binding to amino acid residues were determined. Adduction occurred on the cysteine, lysine, and histidine residues, and on the N-terminus. Monoadduct formation occurred in 39 of the 48 reactions. In reactions with the naphthoquinones, diadducts were observed, and in one case, a triadduct was detected. The results from this model peptide study will assist in data interpretation from ongoing work to detect peptide adducts in vivo as markers of biologic effect.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 1998

Identification of a carboxylesterase as the major protein bound by molinate.

William T. Jewell; Marion G. Miller


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2004

Comparison of pulmonary/nasal CYP2F expression levels in rodents and rhesus macaque.

R. Michael Baldwin; William T. Jewell; Michelle V. Fanucchi; Charles G. Plopper; Alan R. Buckpitt


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 1998

Testicular toxicity of molinate in the rat: metabolic activation via sulfoxidation

William T. Jewell; Rex A. Hess; Marion G. Miller


Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2005

Characterization of a structurally intact in situ lung model and comparison of naphthalene protein adducts generated in this model vs lung microsomes.

Ching-Yu Lin; Margaret A. Isbell; Dexter Morin; Bridget C. Boland; Michelle Salemi; William T. Jewell; Alison J. Weir; Michelle V. Fanucchi; Gregory L. Baker; Charles G. Plopper; Alan R. Buckpitt


Aquatic Toxicology | 2005

Characterization of cytosolic glutathione S-transferases in juvenile Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha).

Rachel T. Donham; Dexter Morin; William T. Jewell; Michael W. Lamé; H.J. Segall; Ronald S. Tjeerdema


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 1999

Comparison of human and rat metabolism of molinate in liver microsomes and slices.

William T. Jewell; Marion G. Miller

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Dexter Morin

University of California

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Andrea D. Luna

University of California

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H.J. Segall

University of California

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Michelle V. Fanucchi

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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