11 research outputs found
A Departmental Focus on High Impact Undergraduate Research Experiences
Undergraduate research experiences have become an integral part of the Hamilton College chemistry experience. The major premise of the chemistry department\u27s curriculum is that research is a powerful teaching tool. Curricular offerings have been developed and implemented to better prepare students for the independence required for successful undergraduate research experiences offered during the academic year and the summer. Administrative support has played a critical role in our ability to initiate and sustain scholarly research programs for all faculty members in the department. The research-rich curriculum is built directly upon or derived from the scholarly research agendas of our faculty members. The combined strengths and synergies of our curriculum and summer research program have allowed us to pursue several programmatic initiatives
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A Maldiisotopic Approach to Discover Natural Products: Cryptomaldamide, a Hybrid Tripeptide from the Marine Cyanobacterium Moorea producens
Genome sequencing of microorganisms has revealed a greatly increased capacity for natural products biosynthesis than was previously recognized from compound isolation efforts alone. Hence, new methods are needed for the discovery and description of this hidden secondary metabolite potential. Here we show that provision of heavy nitrogen 15N-nitrate to marine cyanobacterial cultures followed by single-filament MALDI analysis over a period of days was highly effective in identifying a new natural product with an exceptionally high nitrogen content. The compound, named cryptomaldamide, was subsequently isolated using MS to guide the purification process, and its structure determined by 2D NMR and other spectroscopic and chromatographic methods. Bioinformatic analysis of the draft genome sequence identified a 28.7 kB gene cluster that putatively encodes for cryptomaldamide biosynthesis. Notably, an amidinotransferase is proposed to initiate the biosynthetic process by transferring an amidino group from arginine to serine to produce the first residue to be incorporated by the hybrid NRPS-PKS pathway. The maldiisotopic approach presented here is thus demonstrated to provide an orthogonal method by which to discover novel chemical diversity from Nature
A Maldiisotopic Approach to Discover Natural Products: Cryptomaldamide, a Hybrid Tripeptide from the Marine Cyanobacterium <i>Moorea producens</i>
Genome sequencing of microorganisms
has revealed a greatly increased
capacity for natural products biosynthesis than was previously recognized
from compound isolation efforts alone. Hence, new methods are needed
for the discovery and description of this hidden secondary metabolite
potential. Here we show that provision of heavy nitrogen <sup>15</sup>N-nitrate to marine cyanobacterial cultures followed by single-filament
MALDI analysis over a period of days was highly effective in identifying
a new natural product with an exceptionally high nitrogen content.
The compound, named cryptomaldamide, was subsequently isolated using
MS to guide the purification process, and its structure determined
by 2D NMR and other spectroscopic and chromatographic methods. Bioinformatic
analysis of the draft genome sequence identified a 28.7 kB gene cluster
that putatively encodes for cryptomaldamide biosynthesis. Notably,
an amidinotransferase is proposed to initiate the biosynthetic process
by transferring an amidino group from arginine to serine to produce
the first residue to be incorporated by the hybrid NRPS-PKS pathway.
The maldiisotopic approach presented here is thus demonstrated to
provide an orthogonal method by which to discover novel chemical diversity
from Nature