
Dr John Crosby
B.Sc.(Hull), Ph.D.(Edin.)
Current positions
Associate Professor
School of Chemistry
Contact
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Research interests
Research in our group involves the use of a broad range of techniques including protein expression and purification, enzyme kinetics, and the accurate mass analysis of these large biomolecules by electrospray mass spectrometry. By isolating individual enzymes and establishing structural details, enzyme specificities, and kinetic characteristics we hope to understand fully how biosynthetic pathways are controlled.
Enzymology of Polyketide Biosynthesis
Many biologically active compounds are synthesised in nature via the polyketide pathway. The core of all polyketide structures is similar, and is assembled by a multicomponent enzyme system, the polyketide synthase (PKS). The synthase controls a series of cycles of reactions in which simple building blocks (usually acetate) are linked via carbon bond formation, followed by a highly specific sequence of modifying reactions. We aim to understand how the PKS controls the exact sequence of chemical steps involved in the biosynthesis of antibiotics.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
3-month Core Capability for Chemistry Research
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of ChemistryDates
01/01/2013 to 01/04/2013
Thesis supervisions
Publications
Recent publications
10/01/2025Divergent Tandem Acyl Carrier Proteins Necessitate In-Series Polyketide Processing in the Leinamycin Family
Angewandte Chemie
An Integrated Module Performs Selective ‘Online’ Epoxidation in the Biosynthesis of the Antibiotic Mupirocin
Angewandte Chemie
Path to Actinorhodin
JACS Au
Control of beta-Branching in Kalimantacin Biosynthesis
Angewandte Chemie
An Oxetane-Based Polyketide Surrogate to Probe Substrate Binding in a Polyketide Synthase
Journal of the American Chemical Society