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result(s) for
"Pearce, Kenneth H."
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A novel small molecule screening assay using normal human chondrocytes toward osteoarthritis drug discovery
by
Loeser, Richard F.
,
Pearce, Kenneth H.
,
Coryell, Philip R.
in
Analysis
,
Antibodies
,
Biology and Life Sciences
2024
Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common form of arthritis and a leading cause of pain and disability in adults. A central feature is progressive cartilage degradation and matrix fragment formation driven by the excessive production of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), such as MMP-13, by articular chondrocytes. Inflammatory factors, including interleukin 6 (IL-6), are secreted into the joint by synovial fibroblasts, and can contribute to pain and inflammation. No therapeutic exists that addresses the underlying loss of joint tissue in OA. To address this, we developed and utilized a cell-based high-throughput OA drug discovery platform using normal human chondrocytes treated with a recombinant fragment of the matrix protein fibronectin (FN-f) as a catabolic stimulus relevant to OA pathogenesis and a readout using a fluorescent MMP-13 responsive probe. The goal was to test this screening platform by identifying compounds that inhibited FN-f-induced MMP-13 production and determine if these compounds also inhibited catabolic signaling in OA chondrocytes and synovial fibroblasts. Two pilot screens of 1344 small molecules revealed five “hits” that strongly inhibited FN-f induced MMP-13 production with low cytotoxicity. These included RO-3306 (CDK1 inhibitor (i)), staurosporine (PKCi), trametinib (MEK1 and MEK2i), GSK-626616 (DYRK3i), and edicotinib (CSF-1Ri). Secondary testing using immunoblots and cells derived from OA joint tissues confirmed the ability of selected compounds to inhibit chondrocyte MMP-13 production and FN-f stimulated IL-6 production by synovial fibroblasts. These findings support the use of this high throughput screening assay for discovery of disease-modifying osteoarthritis drugs.
Journal Article
In silico fragment-based discovery of CIB1-directed anti-tumor agents by FRASE-bot
by
Wang, Xiaowen
,
Hardy, P. Brian
,
Norris-Drouin, Jacqueline
in
119/118
,
631/154/1435/2418
,
631/92/606
2024
Chemical probes are an indispensable tool for translating biological discoveries into new therapies, though are increasingly difficult to identify since novel therapeutic targets are often hard-to-drug proteins. We introduce FRASE-based hit-finding robot (FRASE-bot), to expedite drug discovery for unconventional therapeutic targets. FRASE-bot mines available 3D structures of ligand-protein complexes to create a database of FRAgments in Structural Environments (FRASE). The FRASE database can be screened to identify structural environments similar to those in the target protein and seed the target structure with relevant ligand fragments. A neural network model is used to retain fragments with the highest likelihood of being native binders. The seeded fragments then inform ultra-large-scale virtual screening of commercially available compounds. We apply FRASE-bot to identify ligands for Calcium and Integrin Binding protein 1 (CIB1), a promising drug target implicated in triple negative breast cancer. FRASE-based virtual screening identifies a small-molecule CIB1 ligand (with binding confirmed in a TR-FRET assay) showing specific cell-killing activity in CIB1-dependent cancer cells, but not in CIB1-depletion-insensitive cells.
Newly identified therapeutic targets are often hard-to-drug proteins. Here, the authors introduce FRASE-based hit-finding robot (FRASE-bot), to expedite drug discovery for unconventional therapeutic targets.
Journal Article
A neomorphic cancer cell-specific role of MAGE-A4 in trans-lesion synthesis
by
Yan, Feng
,
Tateishi, Satoshi
,
Greenwalt, Alicia M.
in
631/337/1427
,
631/337/474/2073
,
631/80/86
2016
Trans-lesion synthesis (TLS) is an important DNA-damage tolerance mechanism that permits ongoing DNA synthesis in cells harbouring damaged genomes. The E3 ubiquitin ligase RAD18 activates TLS by promoting recruitment of Y-family DNA polymerases to sites of DNA-damage-induced replication fork stalling. Here we identify the cancer/testes antigen melanoma antigen-A4 (MAGE-A4) as a tumour cell-specific RAD18-binding partner and an activator of TLS. MAGE-A4 depletion from MAGE-A4-expressing cancer cells destabilizes RAD18. Conversely, ectopic expression of MAGE-A4 (in cell lines lacking endogenous MAGE-A4) promotes RAD18 stability. DNA-damage-induced mono-ubiquitination of the RAD18 substrate PCNA is attenuated by MAGE-A4 silencing. MAGE-A4-depleted cells fail to resume DNA synthesis normally following ultraviolet irradiation and accumulate γH2AX, thereby recapitulating major hallmarks of TLS deficiency. Taken together, these results demonstrate a mechanism by which reprogramming of ubiquitin signalling in cancer cells can influence DNA damage tolerance and probably contribute to an altered genomic landscape.
RAD18 is an important protein in trans-lesion synthesis, an error-prone damage-tolerant mode of DNA replication. Here the authors show that MAGE-A4 stabilizes RAD18 and allows cancer cells to maintain on-going DNA synthesis in the face of genotoxic injury.
Journal Article
Characterization of covalent inhibitors that disrupt the interaction between the tandem SH2 domains of SYK and FCER1G phospho-ITAM
by
Rygiel, Karolina A.
,
Bradshaw, William J.
,
Williams, C. Andrew
in
Advertising executives
,
Alzheimer's disease
,
Biology and Life Sciences
2024
RNA sequencing and genetic data support spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK) and high affinity immunoglobulin epsilon receptor subunit gamma (FCER1G) as putative targets to be modulated for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) therapy. FCER1G is a component of Fc receptor complexes that contain an immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM). SYK interacts with the Fc receptor by binding to doubly phosphorylated ITAM (p-ITAM) via its two tandem SH2 domains (SYK-tSH2). Interaction of the FCER1G p-ITAM with SYK-tSH2 enables SYK activation via phosphorylation. Since SYK activation is reported to exacerbate AD pathology, we hypothesized that disruption of this interaction would be beneficial for AD patients. Herein, we developed biochemical and biophysical assays to enable the discovery of small molecules that perturb the interaction between the FCER1G p-ITAM and SYK-tSH2. We identified two distinct chemotypes using a high-throughput screen (HTS) and orthogonally assessed their binding. Both chemotypes covalently modify SYK-tSH2 and inhibit its interaction with FCER1G p-ITAM, however, these compounds lack selectivity and this limits their utility as chemical tools.
Journal Article
Potent and selective SETDB1 covalent negative allosteric modulator reduces methyltransferase activity in cells
by
Norris-Drouin, Jacqueline L.
,
Barsyte-Lovejoy, Dalia
,
Szewczyk, Magdalena M.
in
101/47
,
101/58
,
13/1
2025
A promising drug target, SETDB1, is a dual methyl-lysine (Kme) reader and methyltransferase implicated in cancer and neurodegenerative disease progression. To help understand the role of the triple Tudor domain (3TD) of SETDB1, its Kme reader, we first identify a low micromolar potency small molecule ligand, UNC6535, which occupies simultaneously both the TD2 and TD3 reader binding sites. Further optimization leads to the discovery of UNC10013, a covalent 3TD ligand targeting Cys385 of SETDB1. UNC10013 is potent with a k
inact
/K
I
of 1.0 × 10
6
M
−1
s
−1
and demonstrates proteome-wide selectivity. In cells, negative allosteric modulation of SETDB1-mediated Akt methylation occurs after treatment with UNC10013. Therefore, UNC10013 is a potent, selective, and cell-active covalent ligand for the 3TD of SETDB1, demonstrating negative allosteric modulator properties and making it a promising tool to study the biological role of SETDB1 in disease progression.
Design of cysteine-targeting analogs of a reversible SETDB1 triple Tudor domain (3TD) ligand, UNC6535, led to UNC10013, a potent covalent ligand with high selectivity. UNC10013 demonstrated allosteric inhibition of SETDB1-mediated Akt methylation in cells, a promising approach to SETDB1 therapeutics.
Journal Article
A covalent chemical probe for Chikungunya nsP2 cysteine protease with antialphaviral activity and proteome-wide selectivity
by
Streblow, Zachary J.
,
Asressu, Kesatebrhan Haile
,
Martinez, Sabian A.
in
631/154
,
631/154/309
,
631/154/309/556
2025
Chikungunya
is a mosquito-borne viral disease that causes fever and severe joint pain for which there is no direct acting drug treatments. Vinyl sulfone SGC-NSP2PRO-1 (
3
) was identified as a potent inhibitor of the nsP2 cysteine protease (nsP2pro) that reduced viral titer against infectious isolates of
Chikungunya
and other alphaviruses. The covalent warhead in
3
captured the active site C478 and inactivated nsP2pro with a
k
inact
/
K
i
ratio of 5950 M
–1
s
–1
. The vinyl sulfone
3
was inactive across a panel of 23 other cysteine proteases and demonstrated remarkable proteome-wide selectivity by two chemoproteomic methods. A negative control analog SGC-NSP2PRO-1N (
4
) retained the isoxazole core and covalent warhead but demonstrated > 100-fold decrease in enzyme inhibition. Both
3
and
4
were stable across a wide range of pH in solution and upon prolonged storage as solids. Vinyl sulfone
3
and its negative control
4
will find utility as high-quality chemical probes to study the role of the nsP2pro in cellular studies of alphaviral replication and virulence.
Journal Article
Design and Construction of a Focused DNA-Encoded Library for Multivalent Chromatin Reader Proteins
by
Norris-Drouin, Jacqueline L.
,
Dang, Zhao
,
Kaufmann, Kyle W.
in
Binding sites
,
Chromatin - chemistry
,
Chromatin - genetics
2020
Chromatin structure and function, and consequently cellular phenotype, is regulated in part by a network of chromatin-modifying enzymes that place post-translational modifications (PTMs) on histone tails. These marks serve as recruitment sites for other chromatin regulatory complexes that ‘read’ these PTMs. High-quality chemical probes that can block reader functions of proteins involved in chromatin regulation are important tools to improve our understanding of pathways involved in chromatin dynamics. Insight into the intricate system of chromatin PTMs and their context within the epigenome is also therapeutically important as misregulation of this complex system is implicated in numerous human diseases. Using computational methods, along with structure-based knowledge, we have designed and constructed a focused DNA-Encoded Library (DEL) containing approximately 60,000 compounds targeting bi-valent methyl-lysine (Kme) reader domains. Additionally, we have constructed DNA-barcoded control compounds to allow optimization of selection conditions using a model Kme reader domain. We anticipate that this target-class focused approach will serve as a new method for rapid discovery of inhibitors for multivalent chromatin reader domains.
Journal Article
A High-Throughput Screening-Compatible Strategy for the Identification of Inositol Pyrophosphate Kinase Inhibitors
by
Jessen, Henning J.
,
Wang, Huanchen
,
Shears, Stephen B.
in
Adenosine diphosphate
,
Adenosine triphosphate
,
Adenosine Triphosphate - metabolism
2016
Pharmacological tools-'chemical probes'-that intervene in cell signaling cascades are important for complementing genetically-based experimental approaches. Probe development frequently begins with a high-throughput screen (HTS) of a chemical library. Herein, we describe the design, validation, and implementation of the first HTS-compatible strategy against any inositol phosphate kinase. Our target enzyme, PPIP5K, synthesizes 'high-energy' inositol pyrophosphates (PP-InsPs), which regulate cell function at the interface between cellular energy metabolism and signal transduction. We optimized a time-resolved, fluorescence resonance energy transfer ADP-assay to record PPIP5K-catalyzed, ATP-driven phosphorylation of 5-InsP7 to 1,5-InsP8 in 384-well format (Z' = 0.82 ± 0.06). We screened a library of 4745 compounds, all anticipated to be membrane-permeant, which are known-or conjectured based on their structures-to target the nucleotide binding site of protein kinases. At a screening concentration of 13 μM, fifteen compounds inhibited PPIP5K >50%. The potency of nine of these hits was confirmed by dose-response analyses. Three of these molecules were selected from different structural clusters for analysis of binding to PPIP5K, using isothermal calorimetry. Acceptable thermograms were obtained for two compounds, UNC10112646 (Kd = 7.30 ± 0.03 μM) and UNC10225498 (Kd = 1.37 ± 0.03 μM). These Kd values lie within the 1-10 μM range generally recognized as suitable for further probe development. In silico docking data rationalizes the difference in affinities. HPLC analysis confirmed that UNC10225498 and UNC10112646 directly inhibit PPIP5K-catalyzed phosphorylation of 5-InsP7 to 1,5-InsP8; kinetic experiments showed inhibition to be competitive with ATP. No other biological activity has previously been ascribed to either UNC10225498 or UNC10112646; moreover, at 10 μM, neither compound inhibits IP6K2, a structurally-unrelated PP-InsP kinase. Our screening strategy may be generally applicable to inhibitor discovery campaigns for other inositol phosphate kinases.
Journal Article