Biosynthesis of nonribosomal peptide toxins in cyanobacteria: A functional characterisation of microcystin synthetase. Microcystins are potent toxins and tumour promoters produced by cyanobacteria associated with blue-green algal blooms. This non-ribosomal peptide is produced by microcystin synthetase, a unique enzyme complex comprised of peptide synthetases, polyketide synthases, and integrated accessory enzymes. We have identified and characterised the extensive gene cluster encoding this enzy ....Biosynthesis of nonribosomal peptide toxins in cyanobacteria: A functional characterisation of microcystin synthetase. Microcystins are potent toxins and tumour promoters produced by cyanobacteria associated with blue-green algal blooms. This non-ribosomal peptide is produced by microcystin synthetase, a unique enzyme complex comprised of peptide synthetases, polyketide synthases, and integrated accessory enzymes. We have identified and characterised the extensive gene cluster encoding this enzyme. This project describes the biochemical characterisation of specific enzyme activities within microcystin synthetase and how they determine the final structure and toxicity of the many forms of microcystin. Interactions between this enzyme complex and its substrate amino acids will provide information for the genetic engineering of this and similar natural products.Read moreRead less
The toxins of water-borne cyanobacteria: regulation and exploitation of their biosynthesis. Water quality is a major concern in Australia, as is the global need for new natural products with antibiotic activity. The mechanisms by which cyanobacteria produce toxins that reduce the quality of water may very well be the answer to the lack of novel medicinal compounds currently being discovered in nature. Encompassed in this one program are the aims of ameliorating the effects of toxic algal blooms ....The toxins of water-borne cyanobacteria: regulation and exploitation of their biosynthesis. Water quality is a major concern in Australia, as is the global need for new natural products with antibiotic activity. The mechanisms by which cyanobacteria produce toxins that reduce the quality of water may very well be the answer to the lack of novel medicinal compounds currently being discovered in nature. Encompassed in this one program are the aims of ameliorating the effects of toxic algal blooms as well as introducing the means for the design and synthesis of a range of novel bioactive products. The benefits include better water quality and biosafety management options, a new generation of drug design and discovery, and the associated transformation of environmental and medical research and education in Australia.Read moreRead less
A sustainable cellular factory for the production of antibiotics by photosynthetic bacteria. The range and rate of natural product discovery is the limiting factor in developing new pharmaceuticals. Traditional methods for the screening of these compounds or for their chemical synthesis are rapidly becoming inadequate as an increasing number of specific therapies, for cancers and infectious diseases for instance, are required. The research proposed will enable the design and production of "unnat ....A sustainable cellular factory for the production of antibiotics by photosynthetic bacteria. The range and rate of natural product discovery is the limiting factor in developing new pharmaceuticals. Traditional methods for the screening of these compounds or for their chemical synthesis are rapidly becoming inadequate as an increasing number of specific therapies, for cancers and infectious diseases for instance, are required. The research proposed will enable the design and production of "unnatural" products, including novel antibiotics, via combinatorial biosynthesis in photosynthetic microorgansims. The outcomes include graduate student training and Australian innovation in an enormous global market that is awaiting the next generation of medicines and associated pharmaceutical production technologies.Read moreRead less
Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment And Facilities - Grant ID: LE0454052
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$733,595.00
Summary
Tandem Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionisation Time-Of-Flight Mass Spectrometer and Robots for High Throughput Proteomics Analysis. This proposal seeks to establish the capacity to perform high-energy tandem mass spectrometry on a high throughput basis, through purchase and coordinated operation of a Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionisation - Time of Flight / Time of Flight - Mass Spectrometer and ancillary equipment, to enhance the proteomics expertise, infrastructure and research plans ....Tandem Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionisation Time-Of-Flight Mass Spectrometer and Robots for High Throughput Proteomics Analysis. This proposal seeks to establish the capacity to perform high-energy tandem mass spectrometry on a high throughput basis, through purchase and coordinated operation of a Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionisation - Time of Flight / Time of Flight - Mass Spectrometer and ancillary equipment, to enhance the proteomics expertise, infrastructure and research plans of a network of institutions from Queensland and New South Wales and their collaborators. Access to such instrumentation is critical to high level achievement in proteomics, a key platform technology for National Research Priorities relating to Frontier Technologies. No comparable instrument currently exists in Australia.Read moreRead less
Exploring the gene regulation networks governing mitochondrial biogenesis in Arabidopsis. Mitochondria, subcellular organelles that perform many functions indispensable to plant growth and productivity, are dynamic compartments whose protein complement changes dramatically during plant development and under stress. Yet, the cellular processes that regulate the production of these organelles are virtually unknown. By combining conventional approaches with an extremely powerful holistic method for ....Exploring the gene regulation networks governing mitochondrial biogenesis in Arabidopsis. Mitochondria, subcellular organelles that perform many functions indispensable to plant growth and productivity, are dynamic compartments whose protein complement changes dramatically during plant development and under stress. Yet, the cellular processes that regulate the production of these organelles are virtually unknown. By combining conventional approaches with an extremely powerful holistic method for simultaneously examining the expression patterns of every gene in the model plant Arabidopsis, this project will identify proteins that regulate mitochondrial biosynthesis and uncover the gene networks that these proteins control. The project outcomes will provide new opportunities for the rational manipulation of plant growth and productivity.Read moreRead less
The MYB gene as a model for global transcriptional regulation: stopping, starting and looping. This project will study how transcriptional elongation controls the MYB gene, a key regulator of normal and cancerous growth and regulation. There are three major benefits that are likely to flow from the proposed research It will strengthen research in new and important areas of transcriptional regulation, by building research capacity in Australia in the area of gene expression, particularly with res ....The MYB gene as a model for global transcriptional regulation: stopping, starting and looping. This project will study how transcriptional elongation controls the MYB gene, a key regulator of normal and cancerous growth and regulation. There are three major benefits that are likely to flow from the proposed research It will strengthen research in new and important areas of transcriptional regulation, by building research capacity in Australia in the area of gene expression, particularly with respect to transcriptional elongation and long-range regulation. It will highlight a new approach to the therapeutic targeting of MYB in cancer: data generated from this research may enable us to target MYB expression in a range of cancers including breast cancer by inhibiting transcriptional elongation. And it will provide training in advanced molecular biology to postdoctoral scientists and students.Read moreRead less
PKC-zeta-dependent Sp1 Phosphorylation: Regulatory Insights using Novel Phospho-Specific Sp1 Antibodies and Peptide Decoys. This project will demonstrate the value of novel phospho-specific Sp1 antibodies and phospho-Sp1 peptide decoys as new molecular tools to provide invaluable insights into the regulatory roles of phosphorylated Sp1 in the control of gene expression, an area poorly defined at the present time. These agents will be used to increase our fundamental understanding of Sp1 activity ....PKC-zeta-dependent Sp1 Phosphorylation: Regulatory Insights using Novel Phospho-Specific Sp1 Antibodies and Peptide Decoys. This project will demonstrate the value of novel phospho-specific Sp1 antibodies and phospho-Sp1 peptide decoys as new molecular tools to provide invaluable insights into the regulatory roles of phosphorylated Sp1 in the control of gene expression, an area poorly defined at the present time. These agents will be used to increase our fundamental understanding of Sp1 activity by identifying physiologic agonists of the PKC-zeta-phospho-Sp1 axis and FasL-dependent apoptosis, interactions of phospho-Sp1 with the authentic FasL promoter and its recruitment of collaborative factors. The commercial exploitation of phospho-specific Sp1 antibodies and phospho-Sp1 peptide decoys will generate economic returns to Australia.Read moreRead less
Exploration of a mechanistic link between eukaryotic transcription and translation. Gene transcription is functionally coupled to other aspects of eukaryotic mRNA metabolism, emphasizing a need for integrated approaches to analyse the gene expression pathway. We have shown in previous work that yeast cells, when responding to external stimuli, show a tight correlation between changes in the transcriptome composition and homodirectional alterations in the translation state of mRNAs. This phenomen ....Exploration of a mechanistic link between eukaryotic transcription and translation. Gene transcription is functionally coupled to other aspects of eukaryotic mRNA metabolism, emphasizing a need for integrated approaches to analyse the gene expression pathway. We have shown in previous work that yeast cells, when responding to external stimuli, show a tight correlation between changes in the transcriptome composition and homodirectional alterations in the translation state of mRNAs. This phenomenon of ?potentiation? may serve to amplify signal-induced changes in the transcriptome at the translational level. This project will begin to unravel the molecular mechanisms underlying potentiation using experiments designed to distinguish between transcription- and translation-driven mechanisms.Read moreRead less
PKC-zeta-dependent Sp1 phosphorylation: Identification of phosphorylated amino acids, demonstration of functional significance, generation and use of novel phospho-specific Sp1 antibodies. Sp1 is a widely expressed transcription factor that controls the basal expression of virtually every mammalian gene, including that of PDGF-B. We recently reported that PDGF-B expression atypical protein kinase C-zeta phosphorylation of Sp1. Building on these seminal findings, this project will first, delinea ....PKC-zeta-dependent Sp1 phosphorylation: Identification of phosphorylated amino acids, demonstration of functional significance, generation and use of novel phospho-specific Sp1 antibodies. Sp1 is a widely expressed transcription factor that controls the basal expression of virtually every mammalian gene, including that of PDGF-B. We recently reported that PDGF-B expression atypical protein kinase C-zeta phosphorylation of Sp1. Building on these seminal findings, this project will first, delineate the specific amino acid residues in the zinc finger region of Sp1 phosphorylated by PKC-zeta; second, demonstrate the functional importance of these site-specific modifications in the PKC-zeta-Sp1-PDGF-B system and the expression of other genes, and third, generate and use novel antibodies uniquely recognising phosphorylated Sp1 as molecular and diagnostic agents.Read moreRead less
Identification of functionally important autophosphorylation site(s) on ataxia telangiectasia and Rad 3 - related (ATR) protein kinase. The integrity of our genetic material must be maintained so that it can be passed on from one generation to the next and also to minimize the risk of cancer and other pathologies in an individual. There are multiple proteins involved in protecting our DNA including several enzymes that detect and signal DNA damage to a series of pathways involved in halting the ....Identification of functionally important autophosphorylation site(s) on ataxia telangiectasia and Rad 3 - related (ATR) protein kinase. The integrity of our genetic material must be maintained so that it can be passed on from one generation to the next and also to minimize the risk of cancer and other pathologies in an individual. There are multiple proteins involved in protecting our DNA including several enzymes that detect and signal DNA damage to a series of pathways involved in halting the passage of cells through the cell cycle so that repair can occur. This project studies the mechanism of action of one of these enzymes which will be of benefit in designing new compounds to fight disease. Read moreRead less