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faculty
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Anna
K. Mapp
Associate
Professor of Chemistry
Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley
Postdoctoral, NIH, California Institute of Technology
Organic
Chemistry, Chemical Biology, New Synthetic Methods
Phone: (734) 615-6862
E-mail: amapp@umich.edu
Research
Group
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Organic
synthesis offers powerful tools for addressing
questions of biological importance, but the answers
to such questions are often limited by the scope
of available synthetic methods. Thus, as we seek
to unravel complex biological processes, we simultaneously
focus on the development of new synthetic approaches
with a variety of applications.
Much
of our research focuses upon developing a molecular-level
picture of inducible gene expression in eukaryotes
using organic molecules as mechanistic probes.
Regulated gene expression is critical for cellular
existence, and a number of human diseases such
as cancer and diabetes have been linked to aberrant
patterns of gene expression. Therefore, a goal
of primary importance in the scientific community
is the discovery of transcription-based therapeutics
capable of reprogramming gene expression in diseased
cells while leaving normal cells unaffected. While
a general sequence of events that leads to gene
up-regulation is agreed upon, the molecular-level
interactions that regulate the levels and time
course of transcriptional activation remain unknown.
A more detailed picture of gene regulation is a
prerequisite for the eventual development of transcription-based
therapeutics. We
have developed two approaches for identifying the
relevant targets of activator proteins in the transcriptional
machinery, understanding how multiple activator
proteins function synergistically to up-regulate
transcription, and uncovering the regulatory role
of transcriptional machinery composition. We use
an ELISA screen to identify ligands for individual
protein components of the transcriptional machinery
from combinatorial libraries. The selected ligands
are characterized through fluorescence and cross-linking
experiments and can then be used in functional
competition assays both in vitro and in vivo. These
data coupled with BLAST searches of the yeast genome
are used to identify interactions governing the
organization of the eukaryotic transcriptional
machinery.
A
second approach is the design and synthesis of
organic molecules that mimic common protein structural
motifs such as the helix. The structure of each
designed scaffold is governed by the stereochemical
relationships within the molecule, and the synthesis
of the scaffold thus requires a stereocontrolled
approach. Our synthetic approach has applications
beyond the designed scaffolds, including a potentially
general strategy for the selective synthesis of
b-amino acids, a class of structures present in
a variety of natural products and other biologically
active molecules. |
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AWARDS
- 2007 Eli Lilly Award in Biological
Chemistry
- 2006 LS&A Class of 1923
Memorial Teaching Award
- 2006 Amgen Young Investigator Award
- 2005 (NSF) Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists & Engineers
- GlaxoSmithKline Chemistry
Scholars Awards for 2005
- 2004
National Science Foundation Career Award
- 2004
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellowship in
Chemistry
- 2002
Basil O'Connor Starter Scholar Research Award
- March
of Dimes New Investigator in the Toxicological
Sciences, Burroughs Wellcome Fund
- Research
Innovation Award, Research Corporation
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REPRESENTATIVE PUBLICATIONS
- “[3,3]-Rearrangements of phosphonium ylides.” M. L. Ferguson, T. Senecal, T. M. Groendyke and A. K. Mapp. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2006, 128, 4576-7.
- “Unraveling the mechanism of a potent transcriptional activator.” Z. Lu, S. P. Rowe, B. B. Brennan, R. Metzler, J. Nau, A. K. Mapp* and A. Z. Ansari*. J. Biol. Chem. 2005, 29689-98.
- “Probing the stereochemical requirements of artificial transcriptional activators.” S.J. Buhrlage, B.B. Brennan, A.R. Minter, and A.K. Mapp. J. Am Chem. Soc. 2005, 127, 12456-7
- “Succinct Synthesis of b-Amino Acids via Chiral Isoxazolines.” A.A. Fuller, B. Chen, A.R. Minter, and A.K. Mapp. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127, 5376-5385.
- “A small molecule transcriptional activation domain.” A. R. Minter, B. B. Brennan, and A. K. Mapp. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2004, 126, 10504-5.
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