Nguyen, TylerLee, TatDenton, Ryan2015-12-292015-12-292012-04-13Tyler Nguyen, Tat Lee, and Ryan Denton. (2012, April 13). HOMOLOGY MODELING, DOCKING, AND BIOLOGICAL ASSAY DEVELOPMENT FOR LYCOPENE CYCLASE ENZYMES IN FRUIT. Poster session presented at IUPUI Research Day 2012, Indianapolis, Indiana.https://hdl.handle.net/1805/7845poster abstractPlants, as well as many bacteria and fungi, catalyze a ring-forming reac-tion to transform lycopene into a variety of carotenoids by utilizing β-lycopene cyclase among several related enzymes. Though this highly homol-ogous enzyme class has been studied in a variety of organisms, structural and functional characteristics of the enzymes still remain unsolved and no crystal structure is currently known. Introductory computational analysis on lycopene β-cyclase from Capsicum annuum (bell pepper) was performed due to the significant amount of available biological activity data. Computational work included regression analysis on molecular descriptors of several known inhibitors using JMP® Statistical Discovery Software, preliminary homology modeling on the above enzyme using SWISS-MODEL and Chimera Molecular Modeling and Drug Docking software, and preliminary docking experiments utilizing a small test set of known and synthesized inhibitors using ArgusLab software. In addition to the computational study, a whole fruit assay for ly-copene cyclases was developed on lemons. Analysis of known inhibitors led our group to synthesize a series of substituted chalcone inhibitors which were assayed along with known negative and positive control molecules. The extracted carotenoids were analyzed by Liquid Chromatography Mass Spec-trometry (LCMS) to monitor the accumulation of lycopene upon inhibition.en-USLYCOPENE CYCLASE ENZYMESFRUITcarotenoidsbiological activity dataHOMOLOGY MODELING, DOCKING, AND BIOLOGICAL ASSAY DEVELOPMENT FOR LYCOPENE CYCLASE ENZYMES IN FRUITPoster