Program Honors and Capstone Conference Main MenuWelcome from the DeanConference ScheduleEvaluation RubricsSchmid College of Science and Technologyef61ed75d203ace65a2b05613a8adc7a45c04b00
Lindsay Zumwalt
1media/Lindsay Zumwalt - IMG_2843_thumb.jpg2020-05-05T22:51:03+00:00Schmid College of Science and Technologyef61ed75d203ace65a2b05613a8adc7a45c04b00182B.S. Biological Sciences Minor: Health Science Mentor: Dr. Maduka Ogbaplain2020-05-07T16:29:27+00:0033.793577777778,-117.85025Schmid College of Science and Technologyef61ed75d203ace65a2b05613a8adc7a45c04b00
Computational Investigation of the Mechanism of Cysteine Oxidation by Bleach (HOCl) in the Zinc-Binding Core of Cytosolic Chemoreceptor Transducer-Like Protein D (TlpD)
Overview: I investigated the chemical transformation that occurs when a conserved zinc-sulfur complex in Helicobacter pylori interacts with hypochlorite (bleach) secreted during gastric inflammation. My work provides the first detailed molecular-level understanding of how the bacteria efficiently colonizes the guts of >50% of the global population.
Abstract: Helicobacter pylori, a gastric pathogen present in about 50% of the global population, is known to facilitate gastritis, stomach ulcers, and stomach cancer. Previous experimental studies show that local unfolding at the conserved chemoreceptor zinc-binding (CZB) domain within the transducer-like protein D (TlpD) cytoplasmic chemoreceptor upon contact with hypochlorite (a known biological oxidant), is implicated in the mode in which H. pylori effectively colonizes the stomach. However, the mechanism of oxidation at the conserved zinc-bound cysteine residue upon HOCl contact, the role of the zinc complex in modulating the reaction, and the origins of selective oxidation are unknown. Our work utilizes DFT computations to probe plausible mechanisms for the oxidation process, illuminates the role of ligand exchange equilibria at the zinc complex in modulating the reactivity and regioselectivity, and provides new hypotheses for the origin of the chemoattractant response. Insights from our computational study will be presented.