1. Home
  2. About NIDDK
  3. Staff Directory
  4. Carole A. Bewley, Ph.D.

Carole A. Bewley, Ph.D.

Photo of Carole Bewley.
Scientific Focus Areas: Chemical Biology, Molecular Pharmacology, Structural Biology, Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Molecular Biology and Biochemistry

Professional Experience

  • Ph.D., University of California, San Diego, 1995

Research Goal

Research in the Natural Products Chemistry Section focuses on the discovery and development of new classes of molecules that are effective in preventing infections by bacterial and viral pathogens with an emphasis on compounds effective against drug-resistant bacteria and enveloped viruses.

Current Research

Our lab carries out interdisciplinary research aimed at the discovery of biologically active natural products, also known as secondary metabolites; seeks to understand basic principles involved in protein-carbohydrate interactions and how these can be exploited to engineer therapeutics; and designs and synthesizes small molecules and peptides that block or can be used to probe the events that lead to viral entry.

Natural products chemistry and antimicrobials

The chemical and biological properties of natural products, or specialized metabolites, have been optimized for millions of years through evolutionary pressures to effect biology and life. Natural products thus represent an ideal starting point for identifying new inhibitors and probes of macromolecular receptors and biological processes. Ongoing projects, approaches, and interests in our lab include isolation and complete structure elucidation of natural products that kill drug resistant bacteria and block virus infection. To elucidate chemical and 3-dimensional structures of inhibitors we rely on multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and modern spectroscopic techniques. NMR methods are especially powerful because they can be used to directly identify precise targets on proteins, or important structural features of inhibitors that account for activity. A variety of approaches are used to identify targets or determine mechanisms of action, including mutagenesis and genome sequencing, and cell based and functional assays.

Protein-carbohydrate recognition and infectious diseases

Protein-carbohydrate interactions play critical roles in countless biological processes and recognition events ranging from fertilization, inflammation, and trafficking of tumor cells during metastasis. In addition, microbes and many viruses display dense glycan structures, carbohydrate-binding proteins, or both on their outer membranes. We exploit those features by targeting surface glycans with non-human lectins or lectin domains as an approach to inhibit viral infections.  To gain a detailed understanding of the interactions leading to protein-carbohydrate recognition, we use glycan profiling, biophysical techniques, viral infectivity assays, and high-resolution structure determination by NMR or S-ray crystallography. Many protein-carbohydrate interactions are multivalent. A larger goal in our research aims to define at a level that would satisfy chemists, how these multivalent interactions take place and how they manifest in specificity and remarkable potency.

Applying our Research

Infectious diseases take an enormous toll on human health. An understanding of the mechanisms that lead to infection by pathogens, at the molecular level and in high-resolution, can explain how inhibitors are able to block infection. This knowledge can be used to develop new medicines for human health.

Need for Further Study

Unanswered questions relevant to the field of antibiotic discovery and carbohydrate recognition:

  • Can drug resistant bacteria be killed through non-traditional targets, and are these targets 'druggable'?
  • What is the barrier that prevents the vast majority of small molecules to cross the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria? Answers to these questions may facilitate development of new antibiotics.
  • How do lectins achieve precise specificity, and can we use their architecture to engineer therapeutics?

Select Publications

The genome of antibiotic-producing colonies of the Pelagophyte alga Chrysophaeum taylorii reveals a diverse and non-canonical capacity for secondary metabolism.
Davison JR, Rajwani R, Zhao G, Bewley CA.
Sci Rep (2023 Jul 24) 13:11944. Abstract/Full Text
An Artificial Intelligence Approach for Tackling Conformational Energy Uncertainties in Chiroptical Spectroscopies.
Marton G, Koenis MAJ, Liu HB, Bewley CA, Buma WJ, Nicu VP.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl (2023 Sep 18) 62:e202307053. Abstract/Full Text
View More Publications

Research in Plain Language

Our lab employs a wide range of methods to identify and study chemical compounds found in the natural world that can be useful medically. We have a particular interest in engineering compounds that prevent HIV-1 infection by blocking the virus from fusing into healthy cells, and in discovering new natural products that prevent drug-resistant bacterial infections.

Last Reviewed February 2024