3 research outputs found

    Comparison of chemical compounds associated with sclerites from healthy and diseased sea fan corals (Gorgonia ventalina)

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    © The Author(s), 2017. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in PeerJ 5 (2017): e3677, doi:10.7717/peerj.3677.The roles of gorgonian sclerites as structural components and predator deterrents have been widely studied. Yet their role as barriers against microbes has only recently been investigated, and even less is known about the diversity and roles of the chemical compounds associated with sclerites. Here, we examine the semi-volatile organic compound fraction (SVOCs) associated with sclerites from healthy and diseased Gorgonia ventalina sea fan corals to understand their possible role as a stress response or in defense of infection. We also measured the oxidative potential of compounds from diseased and healthy G. ventalina colonies. The results showed that sclerites harbor a great diversity of SVOCs. Overall, 70 compounds were identified, the majority of which are novel with unknown biological roles. The majority of SVOCs identified exhibit multiple immune-related roles including antimicrobial and radical scavenging functions. The free radical activity assays further confirmed the anti-oxidative potential of some these compounds. The anti-oxidative activity was, nonetheless, similar across sclerites regardless of the health condition of the colony, although sclerites from diseased sea fans display slightly higher anti-oxidative activity than the healthy ones. Sclerites harbor great SVOCs diversity, the majority of which are novel to sea fans or any other corals. Yet the scientific literature consulted showed that the roles of compounds found in sclerites vary from antioxidant to antimicrobial compounds. However, this study fell short in determine the origin of the SVOCs identified, undermining our capacity to determine the biological roles of the SVOCs on sclerites and sea fans.This work was supported by the Puerto Rico Center for Environmental Neuroscience (PRCEN) through an NSF Centers of Research Excellent in Science and Technology (CREST) award, number HRD-1137725

    Tyrosinase-Mediated Synthesis of Nanobody-Cell Conjugates.

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    A convenient enzymatic strategy is reported for the modification of cell surfaces. Using a tyrosinase enzyme isolated from Agaricus bisporus, unique tyrosine residues introduced at the C-termini of nanobodies can be site-selectively oxidized to reactive o-quinones. These reactive intermediates undergo rapid modification with nucleophilic thiol, amine, and imidazole residues present on cell surfaces, producing novel nanobody-cell conjugates that display targeted antigen binding. We extend this approach toward the synthesis of nanobody-NK cell conjugates for targeted immunotherapy applications. The resulting NK cell conjugates exhibit targeted cell binding and elicit targeted cell death
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