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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Exploring Indicator Displacement Assays For Phosphate Detection In Seawater, Francis Radics Apr 2022

Exploring Indicator Displacement Assays For Phosphate Detection In Seawater, Francis Radics

Chemistry & Biochemistry Student Scholarship

Francis Radics ’22
Major: Biochemistry
Faculty Mentor: Dr. John Breen, Chemistry and Biochemistry

Indicator displacement assays are based on the optical signal modulation of a noncovalently bound indicator upon dissociation by an analyte species. Our work has focused on exploring the lower detection limits for luminescent displacement assays for inorganic phosphate in seawater using complex ions containing two di(2-picolyl)amine ligands (also called DPA or bis(2-pyridylmethyl)amine), each coordinating a zinc cation. Following the work of B.D. Smith and coworkers, we have prepared three ligands by covalently attaching two DPA moieties, 2,6-bis(chloromethyl) benzene, and 2,6-bis(chloromethyl)-4-methylphenol, and 1,2-phenylenedimethylamine, for assays with 6,7-dihydroxy-4-methanesulfonic acid …


Exploration Of K2 Mycobacteriophages With Bred​, Colby Agostino, Olivia Schmitt Apr 2020

Exploration Of K2 Mycobacteriophages With Bred​, Colby Agostino, Olivia Schmitt

Chemistry & Biochemistry Student Scholarship

Colby Agostino ’22
Major: Biochemistry and Computer Science

Olivia Schmitt ’22
Major: Biochemistry

Faculty Mentor: Dr. Kathleen A. Cornely, Chemistry and Biochemistry

ZoeJ and Marcoliusprime are mycobacteriophage capable of infecting tuberculosis causing bacteria via the lytic and lysogenic cycles. The lytic cycle is the form of viral replication that results in cell death. Lysogeny involves phage DNA being integrated with the DNA of the host cell and preserved through binary fission. However, the bacteria causing tuberculosis do not die in the lysogenic phase. This research project will involve creating mutants of ZoeJ and Marcoliusprime that will not contain the genes …


Mycobacteriophage Morphology As A Diagnostic For Cluster Assignment, Ethan Dionne Apr 2020

Mycobacteriophage Morphology As A Diagnostic For Cluster Assignment, Ethan Dionne

Chemistry & Biochemistry Student Scholarship

Major: Biochemistry


Faculty Mentor: Dr. Kathleen A. Cornely, Chemistry and Biochemistry

Phages are viral bodies that infect bacterial hosts, and have shown promising applications as alternatives to antibiotics for the treatment of bacterial infections. This project examines the morphology of siphoviridae mycobacteriophage, which have long, flexible, non-contractile tails as well as the characteristic head, called a capsid. Using electron microscopy photos of sequenced phages, tail length and capsid diameter were measured and compared to further characterize morphological relationships between genetically distinct phages. The data presented has the potential to work as a diagnostic tool to classify unsequenced phages to genetically …


Towards The Development Of Low-Cost And Easily-Deployable Sensing Platforms For Phosphate, Maureen Pontarelli, Thomas Koch Apr 2020

Towards The Development Of Low-Cost And Easily-Deployable Sensing Platforms For Phosphate, Maureen Pontarelli, Thomas Koch

Chemistry & Biochemistry Student Scholarship

Maureen Pontarelli ’20
Major: Chemistry

Thomas Koch '20
Major: Biochemistry

Faculty Mentor: Dr. John Breen, Chemistry and Biochemistry


Surface Mutation Thr34his Facilitates Purification Of Haemophilus Influenza Carbonic Anhydrase Via Metal Affinity Chromatography, Caroline Foley, Dr. Kathleen Cornely May 2017

Surface Mutation Thr34his Facilitates Purification Of Haemophilus Influenza Carbonic Anhydrase Via Metal Affinity Chromatography, Caroline Foley, Dr. Kathleen Cornely

Chemistry & Biochemistry Student Scholarship

In order to pursue Haemophilus influenza carbonic anhydrase (HICA) as a potential drug target, easy and efficient purification methods must be developed. While immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) may be used, complications with polyhistidine tags is a concern. Inspired by the endogenous metal affinity of Escherichia coli β-carbonic anhydrase (ECCA), we suggest that the generation of histidine clusters on HICA’s surface will facilitate its purification by metal affinity chromatography without the potential interference of His-tags. Here we investigate the Thr34His mutation as a method to generate metal affinity in HICA. Since Thr34His is located only 5.3 Å away from His32, …