Katie Mitchell-Koch
Associate Professor
Education
- Ph.D., University of Kansas
Principal Research Interests
Theoretical and computational methods are used to address:
- Biomolecular solvation: structure-dynamics of the solvent shell
- Non-aqueous biocatalysis: how does solvation influence enzyme dynamics?
- Understanding fluorine chemical shifts in small molecules and protein environments
- Collaborative endeavors in drug design, green chemistry, and inorganic/organometallic/bioinorganic chemistry
ORCID profile:
Google Scholar profile:
(With collaborator Prof. Vinh Nguyen, Virginia Tech, dielectric spectroscopy)
Water molecules around proteins have heterogeneous dynamics: at some parts of the surface, water moves as quickly as it does far away from the protein, while other regions of the protein surface exhibit slow hydration dynamics. We are looking at connections between:
- Solvent structure and dynamics: Water moves faster in regions of higher solvation layer density around the enzyme Candida antarctica lipase B (CALB). This result seems unexpected. We鈥檝e shown that around this enzyme, the hydration layer water molecules, like many bulk liquids, obey Rosenfeld scaling: where diffusion, D 伪 ln S2. In other words, diffusion is faster where the excess, or pairwise, entropy is higher. Water at lower density has analogies to ice (though it is still very much a liquid!), with more tetrahedrality and lower entropy, and concomitantly, slower diffusion.1
- Protein structure and solvent dynamics: For water around proteins, our results show slower water dynamics are favored by concave curvature and hydrophobic regions,1 in agreement with other scientists鈥 results, although strong biomolecule-water hydrogen bonds also generally slow down water reorientation.2 We鈥檙e also interested in biocatalysis in organic solvents, and we see that regions of faster and slower dynamics in the solvation layer shift around when you change from water to tert-butanol to cyclohexane, for example.3 This is due to differences in the protein-solvent interactions as solvent shape, size, polarity, and hydrogen bonding abilities change. Work is underway to correlate properties of the protein structure with regional solvent dynamics of organic solvents in which CALB is stable and enzymatically active.
- Solvent dynamics and protein dynamics: Protein dynamics are a diffusive, or Brownian, process. Slower moving solvent represents a higher friction environment. We have shown that the conformational dynamics of CALB (opening/closing for substrate binding and release) vary by the location of crystallographic waters that are kept when the enzyme is simulated in organic solvent.4 We also see that for CALB in different solvents, there is a correlation between protein flexibility and the mobility of local solvent molecules.3 Work is underway to further explore these connections. Funding from National Science Foundation and ACS Petroleum Research Fund
(With collaborator Prof. Jim Bann, 麻豆传媒映画出品 State, fluorolabelled protein studies)
Our goals include:
- Using small molecules to develop a framework to understand fluorine chemical shifts. Changes in electronic structure, characterized with DFT calculations, can rationalize chemical shifts,5 and chemical shifts report on other molecular properties. For example, calculations indicate that 19F chemical shifts can identify tautomeric forms of fluorohistidines.6 7
- Developing methods for computational assignment and interpretation of fluorine chemical shifts in protein environments. Fluorolabeled amino acids can be incorporated into proteins, serving as valuable reporters on protein structure, function, and interactions. We have determined the best electronic structure methods to calculate fluorine chemical shifts of different classes of fluorinated amino acids,8 and work is underway to calculate fluorine chemical shifts in proteins using a combination of molecular dynamics simulations and electronic structure calculations. Funding from K-INBRE
- Mechanistic investigations in organometallic reactions and development of P-31 NMR spectroscopy as a reporter on catalytic intermediates: With Prof. Kami Hull (University of Texas-Austin), we are carrying out DFT calculations to understand selectivity and mechanism in transition metal-catalyzed reactions. Some of these processes involve phosphine ligands. Our calculations indicate that P-31 NMR reports on the identity of axial ligands and the coordination environment of catalytic intermediates (i.e. distinct changes in P-31 chemical shift of phosphine ligands arise from changing the metal鈥檚 coordination environment). Work is underway to develop computationally-assisted assignment and interpretation of phosphorous chemical shifts in organometallic complexes. Funding from National Science Foundation for theoretical work (Mitchell-Koch, PI)
- Small molecule interactions with lipids and amphiphiles: With Prof. Doug English (麻豆传媒映画出品 State), we have investigated the interactions of substrates with different micelles for selective oxidation reactions using bromide. This work has involved development of a force field for simulations of cetyl pyridinium bromide (CPB) micelles.9 With Prof. Dennis Burns (麻豆传媒映画出品 State), Prof. English, and Prof. Erika Lutter (Oklahoma State) we are studying liptins: several families of small molecules developed by Prof. Burns that target the anionic lipid head group phosphatidylglycerol (PG), a component of bacterial membranes. We are simulating the interactions of liptins with a lipid bilayer patch that contains a mixture of PG and other lipids. Liptins have shown antibiotic activity in the laboratory, and we are developing computational methods for in silico screening of potential synthetic modifications to the PG-binding molecules for enhanced affinity.
Representative Publications
1. Jayangika N. Dahanayake and Katie R. Mitchell-Koch 鈥淓ntropy Connects Water Structure
and Dynamics in Protein Hydration Layer鈥 Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2018, 20 (21), 14765-14777.
2. Deepu K. George, Ali Charkhesht, Olivia A. Hull, Archana Mishra, Daniel G. S. Capelluto,
Katie R. Mitchell-Koch, Nguyen Q. Vinh, 鈥淣ew Insights into the Dynamics of Micelles
and their Hydration Waters by Gigahertz-to-Terahertz Spectroscopy鈥 Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2016, 120, 10757-10767.
3. Jayangika N. Dahanayake and Katie R. Mitchell-Koch 鈥淗ow Does Solvation Layer Mobility
Affect Protein Structural Dynamics?鈥 Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences, 2018, 5:65. invited submission to special issue on 鈥淪tructural Dynamics of Enzymes鈥
4. Jayangika Dahanayake, Devaki N. Gautam, Rajni Verma, Katie R. Mitchell-Koch, 鈥淭o
Keep or Not to Keep? The Question of Crystallographic Waters for Enzyme Simulations
in Organic Solvent鈥, Molecular Simulation, 2016, 42 (12), 1001-1013. https://doi.org/10.1080/08927022.2016.1139108
5. Chandana Kasireddy, James G. Bann, Katie R. Mitchell-Koch 鈥淒emystifying Fluorine
Chemical Shifts: Electronic Structure Calculations Reveal Origins of Seemingly Anomalous
Fluorohistidine 19F-NMR Spectra鈥, Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 2015, 17, 30606-30612.
6. Chandana Kasireddy, Jonathan M. Ellis, James G. Bann, Katie R. Mitchell-Koch, 鈥淭automeric
Stabilities of 4-fluorohistidine Shed New Light on Mechanistic Experiments with Labeled
Ribonuclease A鈥 Chemical Physics Letters, 2016, 666c, 58-61.
7. Chandana Kasireddy, Jonathan M. Ellis, James G. Bann, Katie R. Mitchell-Koch 鈥淪pectroscopic
Signatures, Molecular Properties, and Relative Stabilities of the Tautomers of 2-fluorohistidine
and 4-fluorohistidine鈥, Scientific Reports, 2017, 42651.
8. Jayangika N. Dahanayake, Chandana Kasireddy, Jonathan M. Ellis, Derek Hildebrandt,
Olivia A. Hull, Joseph P. Karnes, Dylan Morlan, and Katie R. Mitchell鈥怟och. "Evaluating
Electronic Structure Methods for Accurate Calculation of 19F Chemical Shifts in Fluorinated
Amino Acids." Journal of Computational Chemistry 2017, 38 (30), 2605-2617.
9. Rajni Verma, Archana Mishra, Katie R. Mitchell-Koch 鈥淢olecular Modeling of Cetylpyridinium
Bromide, a Cationic Surfactant, in Solutions and Micelle鈥 Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation 2015, 11 (11), 5415-5425.