Eli Lilly San Diego Center for Biotechnology in a purpose-built 12,000 square foot laboratory, equipped with all of the necessary instrumentation/computers, including 10 Temperature Controlled Shaker Incubators (capable of fermenting 180 liters per day), four 4-channel AKTAxpress Chromatography Robots plus 13 single channel AKTA Chromatography Systems, Applied Biosystems MALDI-TOF (Voyager DE-RP and Voyager DE-STR) Mass Spectrometers, Applied Biosystems ESI-Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer, ThermoFinnigan LCQ Deca XP Plus ESI-lontrap Mass Spectrometer for MS/MS analysis. Applied Biosystems Qtrap 4000 Mass Spectrometer, five Agilent 1100 HPLCs, Wyatt Minidawn Treso Multiangle Light Scattering and Optlab Refractive Index Detector System, an Aviv Model 215 CD Spectrometer, a Biacore T100, a Robbins Phoenix Crystallization Robot, and a Formulatrix Formulator robot for preparing optimization trays. The remaining 50% of protein crystallization will be conducted at AECOM in a purpose built, similarly equipped crystallization laboratory. X-ray diffraction screening and data collection will be conducted at the APS using Lilly's State-of-the-Art LRL-CAT insertion device beamline, which is equipped with a mosaic CCD area detector and cryogenic crystal handling/mounting robotics. During APS maintenance shutdowns (-25% of the calendar year), access to Beamline X29 at the National Synchrotron Light Source will permit uninterrupted access to X-ray data collection facilities and occasional opportunities for expert intervention for challenging diffraction data collection (as needed).

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Specialized Center--Cooperative Agreements (U54)
Project #
1U54GM093342-01
Application #
7980200
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZGM1-PPBC-3 (GL))
Project Start
2010-05-20
Project End
2015-04-30
Budget Start
2010-05-20
Budget End
2011-04-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$1,670,973
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Department
Type
DUNS #
041544081
City
Champaign
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
61820
Gizzi, Anthony S; Grove, Tyler L; Arnold, Jamie J et al. (2018) A naturally occurring antiviral ribonucleotide encoded by the human genome. Nature 558:610-614
Kenney, Grace E; Dassama, Laura M K; Pandelia, Maria-Eirini et al. (2018) The biosynthesis of methanobactin. Science 359:1411-1416
Park, Yun Ji; Kenney, Grace E; Schachner, Luis F et al. (2018) Repurposed HisC Aminotransferases Complete the Biosynthesis of Some Methanobactins. Biochemistry 57:3515-3523
Calhoun, Sara; Korczynska, Magdalena; Wichelecki, Daniel J et al. (2018) Prediction of enzymatic pathways by integrative pathway mapping. Elife 7:
Sheng, Xiang; Patskovsky, Yury; Vladimirova, Anna et al. (2018) Mechanism and Structure of ?-Resorcylate Decarboxylase. Biochemistry 57:3167-3175
Zallot, RĂ©mi; Oberg, Nils O; Gerlt, John A (2018) 'Democratized' genomic enzymology web tools for functional assignment. Curr Opin Chem Biol 47:77-85
Barr, Ian; Stich, Troy A; Gizzi, Anthony S et al. (2018) X-ray and EPR Characterization of the Auxiliary Fe-S Clusters in the Radical SAM Enzyme PqqE. Biochemistry 57:1306-1315
Gerlt, John A (2017) Genomic Enzymology: Web Tools for Leveraging Protein Family Sequence-Function Space and Genome Context to Discover Novel Functions. Biochemistry 56:4293-4308
Koo, Byoung-Mo; Kritikos, George; Farelli, Jeremiah D et al. (2017) Construction and Analysis of Two Genome-Scale Deletion Libraries for Bacillus subtilis. Cell Syst 4:291-305.e7
Holliday, Gemma L; Brown, Shoshana D; Akiva, Eyal et al. (2017) Biocuration in the structure-function linkage database: the anatomy of a superfamily. Database (Oxford) 2017:

Showing the most recent 10 out of 91 publications