Segura Secures Schlumberger Fellowship
Mike Segura’s goal of developing enzymes that make
new natural products has earned him this year’s Schlumberger
Foundation Fellowship.
Segura, a graduate student in the Department of Chemistry, is studying
how plants make triterpenes—compounds that are useful for
medicinal and agricultural applications. He’s trying to determine
how synthases, or enzymes, that make triterpenes form their complicated
structures. By changing the sequence of amino acids in these triterpene
synthases, Segura can make new compounds with different properties.
“The reactions that triterpene synthases catalyze are so complicated
that chemists can’t do them without enzymes, and the best
way to make new triterpenes is to develop new triterpene synthases,”
said Segura, whose fourth year of graduate study at Rice is being
supported by the 2001–02 Schlumberger Foundation Fellowship.
The fellowship is awarded each year to a student in the Wiess School
of Natural Sciences in mathematics, earth science, chemistry, or
physics. Dean Kathleen Matthews selected Segura from the students
nominated by the department chairs in natural sciences. Schlumberger
Ltd., the second-largest provider of oil-field services, funds the
fellowship through a charitable foundation it established in New
York City.
Segura’s approach has been to make large pools of mutant triterpene
synthases and then identify individual mutants that make the desired
compound. One such compound is lanosterol, a steroid that yeast
needs to make cell membranes. Another is cycloartenol, a very complex
molecule that is found only in plants and that is required for plant
growth.
Segura found that a mutant of the enzyme that normally makes cycloartenol
can make lanosterol using a technique called genetic selection.
He put thousands of mutant cycloartenol synthases into a yeast strain
that needs lanosterol to live. These strains were then grown without
lanosterol, and only those that acquired an enzyme that can make
lanosterol lived. Because only the yeast that can make lanosterol
thrived, Segura was able to sort the randomly generated mutant genes
to find amino acid combinations necessary to make lanosterol. Segura
found the catalytic amino acid that caused the difference by DNA
sequencing. He is mutating this amino acid further to make other
compounds.
In a more complicated method, Segura uses a technique known as “DNA
shuffling” to fragment two genes that perform different reactions,
mix the fragments, and recombine them into millions of randomly
generated DNA combinations. Segura is looking for enzymes that make
lanosterol using the same genetic selection system as before. “We
created a new way to get yeast to grow on cycloartenol, which is
a nonnatural compound to yeast since it is made in plants,”
Segura said. Using this engineered yeast strain, he can genetically
select mutant triterpene synthases that make cycloartenol, even
though normal yeast can’t use cycloartenol for anything. He
gradually is zeroing in on the amino acids that produce the triterpene.
Once Segura finds the essential features, he will begin studying
what new and different reactions they can be manipulated to perform.
“You have to know what to change before you can change it,”
he said. “Right now I’m still trying to find out which
parts are relevant to the tinkering.”
Segura’s adviser, Seiichi Matsuda, is very enthusiastic about
his future. “Mike is extremely creative but also gets things
done efficiently and with great technical expertise,” said
Matsuda, associate professor of chemistry and biochemistry and cell
biology. “This combination is rare and is the reason that
he is so productive. I am confident that he will succeed at any
level.”
Segura hopes that his research will eventually lead to a way to
get yeast to modify compounds to have new properties. Many natural
products have interesting biological activities but cannot be used
for drugs because parts of their structures cause undesired side
effects. His work to develop new ways to alter natural product structures
might eventually lead to new drugs.
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