Ph.D. Program in Structural and
Computational Biology and
Molecular Biophysics

Timothy  Palzkill

Timothy Palzkill

Baylor College of Medicine

Department: Department of Pharmacology
Address: One Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX 77030

Phone: 713-798-5609
Fax: 713-798-3145
Email: timothyp@bcm.tmc.edu
Web:

Education

B.S., 1983, Biology, Creigton University
Ph.D., 1988, Genetics, University of Iowa
Postdoctoral Training, 1988-1990, Genentech Inc. & Postdoctoral Training, 1990-1991, Stanford University

Honors

MERIT Award from teh National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, 2001

Fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology

Research Topic

Protein Structure-Function and Functional Genomics

Research Description

Role of beta-lactamase Mutations in Antibiotic Resistance

This protein structure and function project is concentrated on how mutations can alter the substrate specificity and thus the evolution of b-lactamase enzymes. b-lactam antibiotics, such as the penicillins and cephalosporins, are among the most often used antimicrobial agents. Because of their widespread use, bacterial resistance to these antibiotics has become an increasing problem. The most common mechanism of resistance is the production of b-lactamases. The b-lactamase enzyme provides resistance by catalyzing the hydrolysis of the penicillins and cephalosporins to inactive products. Because of the strong selective pressure of antibiotic therapy, b-lactamases evolve rapidly by acquiring amino acid substitutions that allow the enzymes to degrade newly developed penicillins and cephalosporins.

We are using in vitro mutagenesis to randomize the coding sequences of b-lactamases to create libraries of mutants that contain all possible amino acid substitutions for the region randomized. The random libraries are screened for mutations that alter the substrate specificity of the enzymes and the relevant mutants are characterized biochemically to understand how the substitutions change substrate specificity. These studies provide information for the design of new antimicrobials that are less susceptible to the rapid evolution of resistance.

Functional Genomics Study of Treponema pallidum

A functional genomics approach is being used to identify proteins important for the Treponema pallidum host-pathogen interaction. T. pallidum is the causative agent of syphilis. The complete genome sequence of this organism has been completed. During the previous funding period, we have used a topoisomerase-based method to clone PCR products encoding 1008 of the 1031 open reading frames identified in the genome sequence of T. pallidum. In addition, the plasmid vector system used for cloning the open reading frames, the univector system, permits the rapid conversion of the original plasmid clone set to other functional vectors containing various promoters or tag sequences.

The conversion to functional vectors is based on a single step Cre-loxP site-specific recombination reaction. Using Cre-loxP recombination, the T. pallidum clone set has been converted to specialized vectors for large scale protein expression, phage display and two-hybrid analysis. These plasmid collections will be used in a functional genomics approach to i) identify proteins involved in adhesion to host cells, ii) systematically identify T. pallidum antigenic proteins, and iii) establish a large-scale protein-protein interaction network among periplasmic and surface localized proteins.

Selected Publications

Lab Members

Lab Photos

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Last edited on: November 18, 2009