37 results on '"Seiya Kitamura"'
Search Results
2. Synthetic Elaboration of Native DNA by RASS (SENDR)
- Author
-
Dillon T. Flood, Kyle W. Knouse, Julien C. Vantourout, Seiya Kitamura, Brittany B. Sanchez, Emily J. Sturgell, Jason S. Chen, Dennis W. Wolan, Phil S. Baran, and Philip E. Dawson
- Subjects
Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Development of the Bengamides as New Antibiotics against Drug-Resistant Bacteria
- Author
-
Cristina Porras-Alcalá, Federico Moya-Utrera, Miguel García-Castro, Antonio Sánchez-Ruiz, Juan Manuel López-Romero, María Soledad Pino-González, Amelia Díaz-Morilla, Seiya Kitamura, Dennis W. Wolan, José Prados, Consolación Melguizo, Iván Cheng-Sánchez, and Francisco Sarabia
- Subjects
bengamides ,antibiotics ,drug-resistant bacteria ,antitumor agents ,SAR ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The bengamides comprise an interesting family of natural products isolated from sponges belonging to the prolific Jaspidae family. Their outstanding antitumor properties, coupled with their unique mechanism of action and unprecedented molecular structures, have prompted an intense research activity directed towards their total syntheses, analogue design, and biological evaluations for their development as new anticancer agents. Together with these biological studies in cancer research, in recent years, the bengamides have been identified as potential antibiotics by their impressive biological activities against various drug-resistant bacteria such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Staphylococcus aureus. This review reports on the new advances in the chemistry and biology of the bengamides during the last years, paying special attention to their development as promising new antibiotics. Thus, the evolution of the bengamides from their initial exploration as antitumor agents up to their current status as antibiotics is described in detail, highlighting the manifold value of these marine natural products as valid hits in medicinal chemistry.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Correction to 'Synthetic Elaboration of Native DNA by RASS (SENDR)'
- Author
-
Dillon T. Flood, Kyle W. Knouse, Julien C. Vantourout, Seiya Kitamura, Brittany B. Sanchez, Emily J. Sturgell, Jason S. Chen, Dennis W. Wolan, Phil S. Baran, and Philip E. Dawson
- Subjects
Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Occurrence of urea-based soluble epoxide hydrolase inhibitors from the plants in the order Brassicales.
- Author
-
Seiya Kitamura, Christophe Morisseau, Todd R Harris, Bora Inceoglu, and Bruce D Hammock
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Recently, dibenzylurea-based potent soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH) inhibitors were identified in Pentadiplandra brazzeana, a plant in the order Brassicales. In an effort to generalize the concept, we hypothesized that plants that produce benzyl glucosinolates and corresponding isothiocyanates also produce these dibenzylurea derivatives. Our overall aim here was to examine the occurrence of urea derivatives in Brassicales, hoping to find biologically active urea derivatives from plants. First, plants in the order Brassicales were analyzed for the presence of 1, 3-dibenzylurea (compound 1), showing that three additional plants in the order Brassicales produce the urea derivatives. Based on the hypothesis, three dibenzylurea derivatives with sEH inhibitory activity were isolated from maca (Lepidium meyenii) roots. Topical application of one of the identified compounds (compound 3, human sEH IC50 = 222 nM) effectively reduced pain in rat inflammatory pain model, and this compound was bioavailable after oral administration in mice. The biosynthetic pathway of these urea derivatives was investigated using papaya (Carica papaya) seed as a model system. Finally, a small collection of plants from the Brassicales order was grown, collected, extracted and screened for sEH inhibitory activity. Results show that several plants of the Brassicales order could be potential sources of urea-based sEH inhibitors.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Potent natural soluble epoxide hydrolase inhibitors from Pentadiplandra brazzeana baillon: synthesis, quantification, and measurement of biological activities in vitro and in vivo.
- Author
-
Seiya Kitamura, Christophe Morisseau, Bora Inceoglu, Shizuo G Kamita, Gina R De Nicola, Maximilienne Nyegue, and Bruce D Hammock
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
We describe here three urea-based soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH) inhibitors from the root of the plant Pentadiplandra brazzeana. The concentration of these ureas in the root was quantified by LC-MS/MS, showing that 1, 3-bis (4-methoxybenzyl) urea (MMU) is the most abundant (42.3 μg/g dry root weight). All of the ureas were chemically synthesized, and their inhibitory activity toward recombinant human and recombinant rat sEH was measured. The most potent compound, MMU, showed an IC50 of 92 nM via fluorescent assay and a Ki of 54 nM via radioactivity-based assay on human sEH. MMU effectively reduced inflammatory pain in a rat nociceptive pain assay. These compounds are among the most potent sEH inhibitors derived from natural sources. Moreover, inhibition of sEH by these compounds may mechanistically explain some of the therapeutic effects of P. brazzeana.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Ultrapotent influenza hemagglutinin fusion inhibitors developed through SuFEx-enabled high-throughput medicinal chemistry.
- Author
-
Seiya Kitamura, Ting-Hui Lin, Chang-Chun David Lee, Akihiro Takamura, Kadam, Rameshwar U., Ding Zhang, Xueyong Zhu, Dada, Lucas, Emiko Nagai, Wenli Yu, Yao Yao, Sharpless, K. Barry, Wilson, Ian A., and Wolan, Dennis W.
- Subjects
- *
PHARMACEUTICAL chemistry , *INFLUENZA , *HEMAGGLUTININ , *SEASONAL influenza , *RESPIRATORY infections - Abstract
Seasonal and pandemic-associated influenza strains cause highly contagious viral respiratory infections that can lead to severe illness and excess mortality. Here, we report on the optimization of our small-molecule inhibitor F0045(S) targeting the influenza hemagglutinin (HA) stem with our Sulfur-Fluoride Exchange (SuFEx) click chemistry-based high-throughput medicinal chemistry (HTMC) strategy. A combination of SuFEx- and amide-based lead molecule diversification and structure-guided design led to identification and validation of ultrapotent influenza fusion inhibitors with subnanomolar EC50 cellular antiviral activity against several influenza A group 1 strains. X-ray structures of six of these compounds with HA indicate that the appended moieties occupy additional pockets on the HA surface and increase the binding interaction, where the accumulation of several polar interactions also contributes to the improved affinity. The compounds here represent the most potent HA small-molecule inhibitors to date. Our divergent HTMC platform is therefore a powerful, rapid, and cost-effective approach to develop bioactive chemical probes and drug-like candidates against viral targets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. PROTAC-Mediated Selective Degradation of Cytosolic Soluble Epoxide Hydrolase Enhances ER Stress Reduction
- Author
-
Yuxin Wang, Christophe Morisseau, Akihiro Takamura, Debin Wan, Dongyang Li, Simone Sidoli, Jun Yang, Dennis W. Wolan, Bruce D. Hammock, and Seiya Kitamura
- Subjects
Molecular Medicine ,General Medicine ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Diversity oriented clicking delivers β-substituted alkenyl sulfonyl fluorides as covalent human neutrophil elastase inhibitors
- Author
-
Yunfei Cheng, Gencheng Li, Christopher J. Smedley, Marie-Claire Giel, Seiya Kitamura, Jordan L. Woehl, Giulia Bianco, Stefano Forli, Joshua A. Homer, John R. Cappiello, Dennis W. Wolan, John E. Moses, and K. Barry Sharpless
- Subjects
Fluorides ,Multidisciplinary ,Proteinase Inhibitory Proteins, Secretory ,Humans ,Click Chemistry ,Leukocyte Elastase ,Sulfinic Acids - Abstract
Diversity Oriented Clicking (DOC) is a discovery method geared toward the rapid synthesis of functional libraries. It combines the best attributes of both classical and modern click chemistries. DOC strategies center upon the chemical diversification of core “SuFExable” hubs—exemplified by 2-Substituted-Alkynyl-1-Sulfonyl Fluorides (SASFs)—enabling the modular assembly of compounds through multiple reaction pathways. We report here a range of stereoselective Michael-type addition pathways from SASF hubs including reactions with secondary amines, carboxylates, 1 H -1,2,3-triazole, and halides. These high yielding conjugate addition pathways deliver unprecedented β-substituted alkenyl sulfonyl fluorides as single isomers with minimal purification, greatly enriching the repertoire of DOC and holding true to the fundamentals of modular click chemistry. Further, we demonstrate the potential for biological function – a key objective of click chemistry – of this family of SASF-derived molecules as covalent inhibitors of human neutrophil elastase.
- Published
- 2023
10. Diversity Oriented Clicking: Synthesis of beta-Substituted Alkenyl Sulfonyl Fluorides as Covalent Human Neutrophil Elastase Inhibitors
- Author
-
Yunfei Cheng, Gencheng Li, Christopher J. Smedley, Marie-Claire Giel, Seiya Kitamura, Jordan L. Woehl, Giulia Bianco, Stefano Forli, Joshua A. Homer, John R. Cappiello, Dennis W. Wolan, John E. Moses, and K. Barry Sharpless
- Subjects
human activities - Abstract
Diversity Oriented Clicking (DOC) is a discovery method geared towards the rapid synthesis of functional libraries. It combines the best attributes of both classical and modern click chemistries. DOC strategies center upon the chemical diversification of core “SuFExable” hubs – exemplified by 2-Substituted-Alkynyl-1-Sulfonyl Fluorides (SASFs) – enabling the modular assembly of compounds through multiple reaction pathways. We report here a range of stereoselective Michael-type addition pathways from SASF hubs including reactions with secondary amines, carboxylates, 1H-1,2,3-triazole, and halides. These high yielding conjugate addition pathways deliver unprecedented beta-substituted alkenyl sulfonyl fluorides as single isomers with minimal purification, greatly enriching the repertoire of DOC and holding true to the fundamentals of modular click chemistry. Further, we demonstrate the biological function – another key objective of click chemistry – of this new scaffold as covalent inhibitors of human neutrophil elastase (hNE). The ease of diversification of SASFs through click pathways, enabling rapid access to biologically important molecules, further validates Diversity Oriented Clicking as an effective and robust method for lead discovery.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Synthetic Elaboration of Native DNA by RASS (SENDR)
- Author
-
Phil S. Baran, Dillon T. Flood, Jason S. Chen, Julien C. Vantourout, Brittany Sanchez, Emily J. Sturgell, Dennis W. Wolan, Seiya Kitamura, Philip E. Dawson, and Kyle W. Knouse
- Subjects
Bioconjugation ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Reversible adsorption ,General Chemical Engineering ,General Chemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Organic media ,Combinatorial chemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Yield (chemistry) ,Reagent ,Acetonitrile ,Selectivity ,QD1-999 ,DNA ,Research Article - Abstract
Controlled site-specific bioconjugation through chemical methods to native DNA remains an unanswered challenge. Herein, we report a simple solution to achieve this conjugation through the tactical combination of two recently developed technologies: one for the manipulation of DNA in organic media and another for the chemoselective labeling of alcohols. Reversible adsorption of solid support (RASS) is employed to immobilize DNA and facilitate its transfer into dry acetonitrile. Subsequent reaction with P(V)-based Ψ reagents takes place in high yield with exquisite selectivity for the exposed 3′ or 5′ alcohols on DNA. This two-stage process, dubbed SENDR for Synthetic Elaboration of Native DNA by RASS, can be applied to a multitude of DNA conformations and sequences with a variety of functionalized Ψ reagents to generate useful constructs., The development of synthetic elaboration of native DNA by reversible adsorption of solid support (SENDR) is presented, and its utility is demonstrated in multiple examples relevant to the fields of biology through chemistry.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. An Irreversible Inhibitor to Probe the Role of Streptococcus pyogenes Cysteine Protease SpeB in Evasion of Host Complement Defenses
- Author
-
Dennis W. Wolan, Zhen Han, Landon J. Edgar, Nicholas Dillon, Jordan L. Woehl, Seiya Kitamura, and Victor Nizet
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Proteases ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Proteolysis ,Virulence ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease_cause ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Cysteine protease ,0104 chemical sciences ,Microbiology ,Pathogenesis ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Streptococcus pyogenes ,medicine ,Molecular Medicine ,Bacteria ,Cysteine - Abstract
Members of the CA class of cysteine proteases have multifaceted roles in physiology and virulence for many bacteria. Streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxin B (SpeB) is secreted by Streptococcus pyogenes and implicated in the pathogenesis of the bacterium through degradation of key human immune effector proteins. Here, we developed and characterized a clickable inhibitor, 2S-alkyne, based on X-ray crystallographic analysis and structure-activity relationships. Our SpeB probe showed irreversible enzyme inhibition in biochemical assays and labeled endogenous SpeB in cultured S. pyogenes supernatants. Importantly, application of 2S-alkyne decreased S. pyogenes survival in the presence of human neutrophils and supports the role of SpeB-mediated proteolysis as a mechanism to limit complement-mediated host defense. We posit that our SpeB inhibitor will be a useful chemical tool to regulate, label, and quantitate secreted cysteine proteases with SpeB-like activity in complex biological samples and a lead candidate for new therapeutics designed to sensitize S. pyogenes to host immune clearance.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Diversity Oriented Clicking (DOC): Divergent Synthesis of SuFExable Pharmacophores from 2‐Substituted‐Alkynyl‐1‐Sulfonyl Fluoride (SASF) Hubs
- Author
-
Andrew S. Barrow, Alessandra Ottonello, K. Barry Sharpless, Dennis W. Wolan, Gencheng Li, Yunfei Cheng, Marie-Claire Giel, Seiya Kitamura, John E. Moses, Christopher J. Smedley, and Timothy L Gialelis
- Subjects
Cycloaddition Reaction ,Molecular Structure ,Bicyclic molecule ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,General Chemistry ,Sulfinic Acids ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Combinatorial chemistry ,Article ,Catalysis ,0104 chemical sciences ,Functional importance ,Click chemistry ,Click Chemistry ,Pharmacophore ,Divergent synthesis ,Sulfonyl fluoride - Abstract
Diversity Oriented Clicking (DOC) is a unified click-approach for the modular synthesis of lead-like structures through application of the wide family of click transformations. DOC evolved from the concept of achieving "diversity with ease", by combining classic C-C π-bond click chemistry with recent developments in connective SuFEx-technologies. We showcase 2-Substituted-Alkynyl-1-Sulfonyl Fluorides (SASFs) as a new class of connective hub in concert with a diverse selection of click-cycloaddition processes. Through the selective DOC of SASFs with a range of dipoles and cyclic dienes, we report a diverse click-library of 173 unique functional molecules in minimal synthetic steps. The SuFExable library comprises 10 discrete heterocyclic core structures derived from 1,3- and 1,5-dipoles; while reaction with cyclic dienes yields several three-dimensional bicyclic Diels-Alder adducts. Growing the library to 278 discrete compounds through late-stage modification was made possible through SuFEx click derivatization of the pendant sulfonyl fluoride group in 96 well-plates-demonstrating the versatility of the DOC approach for the rapid synthesis of diverse functional structures. Screening for function against MRSA (USA300) revealed several lead hits with improved activity over methicillin.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Diversity Oriented Clicking (DOC): Divergent Synthesis of SuFExable Pharmacophores from 2‐Substituted‐Alkynyl‐1‐Sulfonyl Fluoride (SASF) Hubs
- Author
-
Christopher J. Smedley, Gencheng Li, Andrew S. Barrow, Timothy L. Gialelis, Marie‐Claire Giel, Alessandra Ottonello, Yunfei Cheng, Seiya Kitamura, Dennis W. Wolan, K. Barry Sharpless, and John E. Moses
- Subjects
010405 organic chemistry ,General Medicine ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Sulfur(VI) Fluoride Exchange (SuFEx)-Enabled High-Throughput Medicinal Chemistry
- Author
-
Seiya Kitamura, Qinheng Zheng, Nicholas Dillon, Angelo Solania, Jordan L. Woehl, Miyako Kotaniguchi, John R. Cappiello, Shinichi Kitamura, Dennis W. Wolan, Victor Nizet, Mitchell V. Hull, Emily I. Chen, and K. Barry Sharpless
- Subjects
Carbamate ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Exotoxins ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,010402 general chemistry ,Proof of Concept Study ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Catalysis ,Jurkat Cells ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Bacterial Proteins ,Catalytic Domain ,Drug Discovery ,High-Throughput Screening Assays ,medicine ,Humans ,Sulfur Compounds ,Drug discovery ,General Chemistry ,Sulfur ,Cysteine protease ,Combinatorial chemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry ,Yield (chemistry) ,Microsomes, Liver ,Click chemistry ,Click Chemistry ,Fluoride ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Optimization of small-molecule probes or drugs is a synthetically lengthy, challenging, and resource-intensive process. Lack of automation and reliance on skilled medicinal chemists is cumbersome in both academic and industrial settings. Here, we demonstrate a high-throughput hit-to-lead process based on the biocompatible sulfur(VI) fluoride exchange (SuFEx) click chemistry. A high-throughput screening hit benzyl (cyanomethyl)carbamate (Ki = 8 μM) against a bacterial cysteine protease SpeB was modified with a SuFExable iminosulfur oxydifluoride [RN═S(O)F2] motif, rapidly diversified into 460 analogs in overnight reactions, and the products were directly screened to yield drug-like inhibitors with 480-fold higher potency (Ki = 18 nM). We showed that the improved molecule is active in a bacteria-host coculture. Since this SuFEx linkage reaction succeeds on picomole scale for direct screening, we anticipate our methodology can accelerate the development of robust biological probes and drug candidates.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Discovery of small-molecule enzyme activators by activity-based protein profiling
- Author
-
Dale L. Boger, Daisuke Ogasawara, Julia M. Bittencourt, Enrique Saez, Shreyosree Chatterjee, C. Godio, Ara Sukiasyan, Andrea Galmozzi, Jerome Eberhardt, Benjamin F. Cravatt, Michael D. Cameron, Stefano Forli, Woojoo Kim, Tyler Johns, Dennis W. Wolan, Seiya Kitamura, Bernard P. Kok, Sean M. Kim, Janice H Xu, and Srijana Ghimire
- Subjects
Male ,Enzyme Activators ,Mice, Obese ,Fluorescence Polarization ,Molecular Dynamics Simulation ,Article ,Small Molecule Libraries ,03 medical and health sciences ,Enzyme activator ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Catalytic triad ,Drug Discovery ,Animals ,Humans ,Molecular Biology ,030304 developmental biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Metabolic Syndrome ,0303 health sciences ,Molecular Structure ,Activator (genetics) ,Drug discovery ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Activity-based proteomics ,Serine hydrolase ,Cell Biology ,Small molecule ,High-Throughput Screening Assays ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Enzyme ,HEK293 Cells ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Insulin Resistance ,Lysophospholipase - Abstract
Activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) has been used extensively to discover and optimize selective inhibitors of enzymes. Here, we show that ABPP can also be implemented to identify the converse – small-molecule enzyme activators. Using a kinetically controlled, fluorescence polarization-ABPP assay, we identify compounds that stimulate the activity of LYPLAL1 – a poorly characterized serine hydrolase with complex genetic links to human metabolic traits. We apply ABPP-guided medicinal chemistry to advance a lead into a selective LYPLAL1 activator suitable for use in vivo. Structural simulations coupled to mutational, biochemical, and biophysical analyses indicate that this compound increases LYPLAL1’s catalytic activity likely by enhancing the efficiency of the catalytic triad charge-relay system. Treatment with this LYPLAL1 activator confers beneficial effects in a mouse model of diet-induced obesity. These findings reveal a new mode of pharmacological regulation for this large enzyme family and suggest that ABPP may aid discovery of activators for additional enzyme classes.
- Published
- 2020
17. PROTAC-mediated selective degradation of cytosolic soluble epoxide hydrolase enhances ER-stress reduction
- Author
-
Yuxin Wang, Christophe Morisseau, Akihiro Takamura, Debin Wan, Dongyang Li, Simone Sidoli, Jun Yang, Dennis W. Wolan, Bruce D. Hammock, and Seiya Kitamura
- Subjects
cardiovascular system - Abstract
SummarySoluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH) is a bifunctional enzyme responsible for lipid metabolism and is a promising drug target. Here, we report the first-in-class PROTACs small molecule degraders of sEH. Our optimized PROTAC selectively targets the degradation of cytosolic but not peroxisomal sEH, resulting in exquisite spatiotemporal control. Remarkably, our sEH PROTAC molecule has higher potency in cellular assays compared to the parent sEH inhibitor as measured by significantly reduced ER stress. Interestingly, our mechanistic data indicate that our PROTAC directs degradation of cytosolic sEH via the lysosome, not through the proteasome. The molecules presented here are useful chemical probes to study the biology of sEH with the potential for therapeutic development. Broadly, our results represent a proof-of-concept for the superior cellular potency of sEH degradation over sEH enzymatic inhibition, as well as subcellular compartment-selective modulation of a protein by PROTACs.HighlightsFirst-in-class soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH) small-molecule degraders.Selective degradation of cytosolic but not peroxisomal sEH.Significant and stable reduction in sEH protein levels, leading to enhanced cellular efficacy in ER stress reduction relative to the parent inhibitor.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Metabolomics activity screening of T cell–induced colitis reveals anti-inflammatory metabolites
- Author
-
Clara Moon, J. Rafael Montenegro-Burke, Xavier Domingo-Almenara, Lars Eckmann, Dennis W. Wolan, Seiya Kitamura, Bernard P. Kok, Carlos Guijas, Enrique Saez, Andrea Galmozzi, and Gary Siuzdak
- Subjects
medicine.drug_class ,T-Lymphocytes ,Metabolite ,T cell ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Anti-inflammatory ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Metabolomics ,medicine ,Humans ,Colitis ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Molecular Biology ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,Complement (complexity) ,Untargeted metabolomics ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Immunology ,sense organs - Abstract
Untargeted metabolomics of disease-associated intestinal microbiota can detect quantitative changes in metabolite profiles and complement other methodologies to reveal the full effect of intestinal dysbiosis. Here, we used the T cell transfer mouse model of colitis to identify small-molecule metabolites with altered abundance due to intestinal inflammation. We applied untargeted metabolomics to detect metabolite signatures in cecal, colonic, and fecal samples from healthy and colitic mice and to uncover differences that would aid in the identification of colitis-associated metabolic processes. We provided an unbiased spatial survey of the GI tract for small molecules, and we identified the likely source of metabolites and biotransformations. Several prioritized metabolites that we detected as being altered in colitis were evaluated for their ability to induce inflammatory signaling in cultured macrophages, such as NF-κB signaling and the expression of cytokines and chemokines upon LPS stimulation. Multiple previously uncharacterized anti-inflammatory and inflammation-augmenting metabolites were thus identified, with phytosphingosine showing the most effective anti-inflammatory activity in vitro. We further demonstrated that oral administration of phytosphingosine decreased inflammation in a mouse model of colitis induced by the compound TNBS. The collection of distinct metabolites we identified and characterized, many of which have not been previously associated with colitis, may offer new biological insight into IBD-associated inflammation and disease pathogenesis.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Genetic basis for the cooperative bioactivation of plant lignans by Eggerthella lenta and other human gut bacteria
- Author
-
Emily Waligurski, Qi Yan Ang, Annamarie Bustion, Fauna Yarza, Suneil K. Koliwad, Barry E. Rich, Xingnan Li, Peter J. Turnbaugh, Adrian A. Franke, Dennis W. Wolan, Stephen Nayfach, Elizabeth N. Bess, Jordan E. Bisanz, Peter Spanogiannopoulos, Diana L. Alba, and Seiya Kitamura
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Immunology ,Microbial Consortia ,Eggerthella lenta ,Reductase ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Microbiology ,Article ,Lignans ,Bacterial genetics ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,Bacterial Proteins ,Species Specificity ,Phylogenetics ,Genetics ,Animals ,Humans ,Microbiome ,Gene ,Biotransformation ,Phylogeny ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Genome ,biology ,030306 microbiology ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Human Genome ,Bacterial ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Gene expression profiling ,Actinobacteria ,Medical Microbiology ,Bacteria ,Genome, Bacterial ,Metabolic Networks and Pathways - Abstract
Plant-derived lignans, consumed daily by most individuals, are thought to protect against cancer and other diseases1; however, their bioactivity requires gut bacterial conversion to enterolignans2. Here, we dissect a four-species bacterial consortium sufficient for all five reactions in this pathway. A single enzyme (benzyl ether reductase, encoded by the gene ber) was sufficient for the first two biotransformations, variable between strains of Eggerthella lenta, critical for enterolignan production in gnotobiotic mice and unique to Coriobacteriia. Transcriptional profiling (RNA sequencing) independently identified ber and genomic loci upregulated by each of the remaining substrates. Despite their low abundance in gut microbiomes and restricted phylogenetic range, all of the identified genes were detectable in the distal gut microbiomes of most individuals living in northern California. Together, these results emphasize the importance of considering strain-level variations and bacterial co-occurrence to gain a mechanistic understanding of the bioactivation of plant secondary metabolites by the human gut microbiome.
- Published
- 2019
20. Chemical inhibition of ENL/AF9 YEATS domains in acute leukemia
- Author
-
Benjamin F. Cravatt, Qinheng Zheng, Leopold Garnar-Wortzel, Eric N. Hampton, Seiya Kitamura, Anissa R. Ramos, Michael A. Erb, Joshua N. Asiaban, Natalia Milosevich, K. Barry Sharpless, Xiaoyu Zhang, Emily Chen, Travis S. Young, Timothy R. Bishop, Arnab K. Chatterjee, Christopher J. Ackerman, Dennis W. Wolan, and Mitchell V. Hull
- Subjects
Leukemia ,Acute leukemia ,Gene expression ,medicine ,CRISPR ,MYB ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Gene ,Loss function ,Chromatin ,Cell biology - Abstract
Transcriptional co-regulators, which mediate chromatin-dependent transcriptional signaling, represent tractable targets to modulate tumorigenic gene expression programs with small molecules. Genetic loss-of-function studies have recently implicated the transcriptional co-activator, ENL, as a selective requirement for the survival of acute leukemia and highlighted an essential role for its chromatin reader YEATS domain. Motivated by these discoveries, we executed a screen of nearly 300,000 small molecules and identified an amido-imidazopyridine inhibitor of the ENL YEATS domain (IC50 = 7 µM). Leveraging a SuFEx-based high-throughput approach to medicinal chemistry optimization, we discovered SR-0813 (IC50 = 25 nM), a potent and selective ENL/AF9 YEATS domain inhibitor that exclusively inhibits the growth of ENL-dependent leukemia cell lines. Armed with this tool and a first-in-class ENL PROTAC, SR-1114, we detailed the response of AML cells to pharmacological ENL disruption for the first time. Most notably, displacement of ENL from chromatin by SR-0813 elicited a strikingly selective suppression of ENL target genes, including HOXA9/10, MYB, MYC and a number of other leukemia proto-oncogenes. Our study reproduces a number of key observations previously made by CRISPR/Cas9 loss of function and dTAG-mediated degradation, and therefore, both reinforces ENL as an emerging leukemia target and validates SR-0813 as a high-quality chemical probe.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. A photoaffinity probe that targets folate-binding proteins
- Author
-
Zhen Han, Peter S. Thuy-Boun, Akihiro Takamura, Seiya Kitamura, and Dennis W. Wolan
- Subjects
Proteomics ,Lysis ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Mass spectrometry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Folic Acid ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Drug Discovery ,Dihydrofolate reductase ,Escherichia coli ,Humans ,Bovine serum albumin ,Molecular Biology ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,biology ,010405 organic chemistry ,Folate binding ,Chemistry ,Caspase 3 ,Microbiota ,Organic Chemistry ,Serum Albumin, Bovine ,Photochemical Processes ,Small molecule ,0104 chemical sciences ,010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistry ,Crosstalk (biology) ,Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase ,Cross-Linking Reagents ,Molecular Probes ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Folic Acid Transporters - Abstract
Folate and related derivatives are essential small molecules required for survival. Of significant interest is the biological role and necessity of folate in the crosstalk between commensal organisms and their respective hosts, including the tremendously complex human distal gut microbiome. Here, we designed a folate-based probe consisting of a photo-crosslinker to detect and quantitate folate-binding proteins from proteomic samples. We demonstrate the selectivity of our probe for the well-established human folate-binding protein dihydrofolate reductase and show no promiscuous labeling occurs with human caspase-3 or bovine serum albumin, which served as negative controls. Affinity-based enrichment of folate-binding proteins from an E. coli lysate in combination with mass spectrometry proteomics verified the ability of our probe to isolate low-abundance folate-dependent proteins. We envision that our probe will serve as a tool to elucidate the roles of commensal microbial folate-binding proteins in health and microbiome-related diseases.
- Published
- 2020
22. Frontispiz: Diversity Oriented Clicking (DOC): Divergent Synthesis of SuFExable Pharmacophores from 2‐Substituted‐Alkynyl‐1‐Sulfonyl Fluoride (SASF) Hubs
- Author
-
Christopher J. Smedley, Gencheng Li, Andrew S. Barrow, Timothy L. Gialelis, Marie‐Claire Giel, Alessandra Ottonello, Yunfei Cheng, Seiya Kitamura, Dennis W. Wolan, K. Barry Sharpless, and John E. Moses
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. SuFEx-Enabled High-Throughput Medicinal Chemistry
- Author
-
Miyako Kotaniguchi, angelo solan, Seiya Kitamura, Jordan L. Woehl, Victor Nizet, Mitchell V. Hull, Emily I. Chen, Dennis W. Wolan, Nicholas Dillon, K. Barry Sharpless, Qinheng Zheng, and Shinichi Kitamura
- Subjects
Chemistry ,Click chemistry ,Biocompatible material ,STREPTOCOCCAL INFECTIONS ,Combinatorial chemistry ,Throughput (business) - Abstract
Optimization of small-molecule probes or drugs is a lengthy, challenging and resource-intensive process. Lack of automation and reliance on skilled medicinal chemists is cumbersome in both academic and industrial settings. Here, we demonstrate a high-throughput hit-to-lead process based on the biocompatible SuFEx click chemistry. A modest high-throughput screening hit against a bacterial cysteine protease SpeB was modified with a SuFExable iminosulfur oxydifluoride [RN=S(O)F2] motif, rapidly diversified into 460 analogs in overnight reactions, and the products directly screened to yield drug-like inhibitors with 300-fold higher potency. We showed that the improved molecule is drug-like and biologically active in a bacteria-host coculture. Since these reactions can be performed on a picomole scale to conserve reagents, we anticipate our methodology can accelerate the development of robust biological probes and drug candidates.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. SuFEx-enabled, agnostic discovery of covalent inhibitors of human neutrophil elastase
- Author
-
K. Barry Sharpless, Seiya Kitamura, Qinheng Zheng, Stefano Forli, Diogo Santos-Martins, John E. Moses, Jordan L. Woehl, Christopher J. Smedley, Dennis W. Wolan, and Gencheng Li
- Subjects
Protein Folding ,Serine Proteinase Inhibitors ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Fluorides ,Inhibitory Concentration 50 ,Humans ,Derivatization ,IC50 ,Cathepsin ,Serine protease ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Molecular Structure ,Sulfur Compounds ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Elastase ,Sulfinic Acids ,3. Good health ,0104 chemical sciences ,Enzyme Activation ,Biochemistry ,Covalent bond ,Physical Sciences ,Click chemistry ,biology.protein ,Click Chemistry ,Selectivity ,Leukocyte Elastase ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Sulfur fluoride exchange (SuFEx) has emerged as the new generation of click chemistry. We report here a SuFEx-enabled, agnostic approach for the discovery and optimization of covalent inhibitors of human neutrophil elastase (hNE). Evaluation of our ever-growing collection of SuFExable compounds toward various biological assays unexpectedly revealed a selective and covalent hNE inhibitor: benzene-1,2-disulfonyl fluoride. Synthetic derivatization of the initial hit led to a more potent agent, 2-(fluorosulfonyl)phenyl fluorosulfate with IC 50 0.24 μM and greater than 833-fold selectivity over the homologous neutrophil serine protease, cathepsin G. The optimized, yet simple benzenoid probe only modified active hNE and not its denatured form.
- Published
- 2019
25. 'Sleeping Beauty' Phenomenon: SuFEx-Enabled Discovery of Selective Covalent Inhibitors of Human Neutrophil Elastase
- Author
-
Jordan L. Woehl, Dennis W. Wolan, Gencheng Li, Christopher J. Smedley, Qinheng Zheng, Diogo Santos-Martins, John E. Moses, Seiya Kitamura, Stefano Forli, and Sharpless Kb
- Subjects
Cathepsin ,Serine protease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,biology ,Covalent bond ,Trifluoromethylation ,Elastase ,biology.protein ,Click chemistry ,Context (language use) ,Fluoride ,Combinatorial chemistry - Abstract
Sulfur-Fluoride Exchange (SuFEx) has emerged as the new generation of click chemistry. We report here a SuFEx-enabled approach exploiting the “sleeping beauty” phenomenon of sulfur fluoride compounds in the context of the serendipitous discovery of selective covalent human neutrophil elastase (hNE) inhibitors. Evaluation of an ever-growing collection of SuFExable compounds toward various biological assays unexpectedly yielded a selective and covalent hNE inhibitor, benzene-1,2-disulfonyl fluoride. Derivatization of the initial hit led to a better agent, 2- triflyl benzenesulfonyl fluoride, itself made through a SuFEx trifluoromethylation process, with IC50 = 1.1 μM and ~200-fold selectivity over the homologous neutrophil serine protease, cathepsin G. The optimized probe only modified active hNE and not its denatured form, setting another example of the “sleeping beauty” phenomenon of sulfur fluoride capturing agents for the discovery of covalent medicines.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Nanobody-based binding assay for the discovery of potent inhibitors of CFTR inhibitory factor (Cif)
- Author
-
Dennis W. Wolan, Natalia Vasylieva, Bruce D. Hammock, Seiya Kitamura, Christophe Morisseau, Dean R. Madden, Jie-Xian Dong, Shirley J. Gee, Kelli L. Hvorecny, and Bogdan Barnych
- Subjects
Virulence Factors ,Competitive sandwich ELISA ,02 engineering and technology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Inhibitory postsynaptic potential ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Virulence factor ,Analytical Chemistry ,Inhibitory Concentration 50 ,Bacterial Proteins ,Catalytic Domain ,medicine ,Animals ,Environmental Chemistry ,Potency ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Spectroscopy ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Chemistry ,Pseudomonas aeruginosa ,Ligand binding assay ,010401 analytical chemistry ,New World ,Single-Domain Antibodies ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Small molecule ,Inhibitory nanobody ,Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator ,0104 chemical sciences ,Enzyme ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Camelids ,Screening ,biology.protein ,Immunization ,Drug ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Other Chemical Sciences ,0210 nano-technology ,Camelids, New World - Abstract
Lead identification and optimization are essential steps in the development of a new drug. It requires cost-effective, selective and sensitive chemical tools. Here, we report a novel method using nanobodies that allows the efficient screening for potent ligands. The method is illustrated with the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator inhibitory factor (Cif), a virulence factor secreted by the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 18 nanobodies selective to Cif were isolated by bio-panning from nanobody-phage library constructed from immunized llama. 8 out of 18 nanobodies were identified as potent inhibitors of Cif enzymatic activity with IC50s in the range of 0.3–6.4 μM. A nanobody VHH219 showed high affinity (KD = 0.08 nM) to Cif and the highest inhibitory potency, IC50 = 0.3 μM. A displacement sandwich ELISA (dsELISA) with VHH219 was then developed for classification of synthetic small molecule inhibitors according their inhibitory potency. The developed assay allowed identification of new inhibitor with highest potency reported so far (0.16 ± 0.02 μM). The results from dsELISA assay correlates strongly with a conventional fluorogenic assay (R = 0.9998) in predicting the inhibitory potency of the tested compounds. However, the novel dsELISA is an order of magnitude more sensitive and allows the identification and ranking of potent inhibitors missed by the classic fluorogenic assay method. These data were supported with Octet biolayer interferometry measurements. The novel method described herein relies solely on the binding properties of the specific neutralizing nanobody, and thus is applicable to any pharmacological target for which such a nanobody can be found, independent of any requirement for catalytic activity.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Rational Design of Potent and Selective Inhibitors of an Epoxide Hydrolase Virulence Factor from Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Author
-
Kelli L. Hvorecny, Bruce D. Hammock, Dean R. Madden, Christophe Morisseau, Jun Niu, and Seiya Kitamura
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,0301 basic medicine ,Cystic Fibrosis ,Virulence Factors ,Medicinal & Biomolecular Chemistry ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,medicine.disease_cause ,Article ,Virulence factor ,Dose-Response Relationship ,Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,03 medical and health sciences ,Rare Diseases ,Models ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Epoxide hydrolase ,Lung ,Epoxide Hydrolases ,Crystallography ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,030102 biochemistry & molecular biology ,biology ,Pseudomonas aeruginosa ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Rational design ,Molecular ,Active site ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator ,030104 developmental biology ,Biochemistry ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Drug Design ,X-Ray ,biology.protein ,Triiodothyronine ,Molecular Medicine ,Hormone analog ,Drug ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions - Abstract
The virulence factor cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) inhibitory factor (Cif) is secreted by Pseudomonas aeruginosa and is the founding member of a distinct class of epoxide hydrolases (EHs) that triggers the catalysis-dependent degradation of the CFTR. We describe here the development of a series of potent and selective Cif inhibitors by structure-based drug design. Initial screening revealed 1a (KB2115), a thyroid hormone analog, as a lead compound with low micromolar potency. Structural requirements for potency were systematically probed, and interactions between Cif and 1a were characterized by X-ray crystallography. On the basis of these data, new compounds were designed to yield additional hydrogen bonding with residues of the Cif active site. From this effort, three compounds were identified that are 10-fold more potent toward Cif than our first-generation inhibitors and have no detectable thyroid hormone-like activity. These inhibitors will be useful tools to study the pathological role of Cif and have the potential for clinical application.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Correction to 'Synthetic Elaboration of Native DNA by RASS (SENDR)'
- Author
-
Kyle W. Knouse, Jason S. Chen, Dillon T. Flood, Seiya Kitamura, Dennis W. Wolan, Phil S. Baran, Brittany Sanchez, Julien C. Vantourout, Philip E. Dawson, and Emily J. Sturgell
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_compound ,Chemistry ,chemistry ,General Chemical Engineering ,General Chemistry ,Computational biology ,QD1-999 ,DNA ,Elaboration ,Addition/Correction - Published
- 2020
29. Probing substrate recognition of bacterial lipoprotein signal peptidase using FRET reporters
- Author
-
Dennis W. Wolan and Seiya Kitamura
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Streptococcus pyogenes ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Lipoproteins ,Biophysics ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Peptide ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Substrate Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Bacterial Proteins ,Structural Biology ,Genes, Reporter ,parasitic diseases ,Genetics ,medicine ,Escherichia coli ,Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer ,Aspartic Acid Endopeptidases ,Molecular Biology ,Diacylglycerol kinase ,Fluorescent Dyes ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Signal peptidase ,Protease ,030102 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Chemistry ,fungi ,Substrate (chemistry) ,Cell Biology ,Transmembrane protein ,Molecular Docking Simulation ,Kinetics ,030104 developmental biology ,Förster resonance energy transfer ,Genes, Bacterial ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Lipoprotein signal peptidase (Lsp) is a transmembrane aspartic acid protease with a pivotal role in the bacterial lipoprotein maturation pathway. Despite the universal use of Lsp across the Bacterial Kingdom and its potential as an antibiotic target, the substrate recognition patterns of Lsp are poorly understood. Here, we investigated the substrate recognition and biochemical properties of Lsp from Gram- (Escherichia coli) and Gram+ (Streptococcus pyogenes) bacteria, using synthetic peptide-based FRET reporters. Didecanoyl glycerol was found to be an optimal lipid length, and Lsp demonstrated exclusive enantio-selectivity for the (R)-form of the diacylglycerol. Our study will facilitate the iterative optimization of in vitro Lsp assays, as well as provide the first chemical interrogation into the substrate scope of Lsp.
- Published
- 2018
30. Lipoprotein Signal Peptidase Inhibitors with Antibiotic Properties Identified through Design of a Robust In Vitro HT Platform
- Author
-
Anna Owensby, Daniel Wall, Seiya Kitamura, and Dennis W. Wolan
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,medicine.drug_class ,High-throughput screening ,Proteolysis ,030106 microbiology ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Antibiotics ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Substrate Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Inhibitory Concentration 50 ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,p-Dimethylaminoazobenzene ,Bacterial Proteins ,Naphthalenesulfonates ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Escherichia coli ,Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer ,Aspartic Acid Endopeptidases ,Molecular Biology ,Pharmacology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Pathogenic bacteria ,biology.organism_classification ,In vitro ,Transmembrane protein ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,030104 developmental biology ,Mechanism of action ,Molecular Medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Peptides ,Bacteria - Abstract
Summary As resistance to antibiotics increases, the exploration of new targets and strategies to combat pathogenic bacteria becomes more urgent. Ideal protein targets are required for viability across many species, are unique to prokaryotes to limit effects on the host, and have robust assays to quantitate activity and identify inhibitors. Lipoprotein signal peptidase (Lsp) is a transmembrane aspartyl protease required for lipoprotein maturation and comprehensively fits these criteria. Here, we have developed the first in vitro high-throughput assay to monitor proteolysis by Lsp. We employed our high-throughput screen assay against 646,275 compounds to discover inhibitors of Lsp and synthesized a range of analogs to generate molecules with nanomolar half maximal inhibitory concentration values. Importantly, our inhibitors are effective in preventing the growth of E. coli cultures in the presence of outer-membrane permeabilizer PMBN and should facilitate development of antibacterial agents with a novel mechanism of action to treat antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
- Published
- 2017
31. Active-Site Flexibility and Substrate Specificity in a Bacterial Virulence Factor: Crystallographic Snapshots of an Epoxide Hydrolase
- Author
-
Christopher D. Bahl, Kelli L. Hvorecny, Kin Sing Stephen Lee, Dean R. Madden, Seiya Kitamura, Bruce D. Hammock, and Christophe Morisseau
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Cell signaling ,enzyme stereospecificity ,structure-function relationships ,Cystic Fibrosis ,Virulence Factors ,Biophysics ,Virulence ,Molecular Dynamics Simulation ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,virulence factor ,Article ,Virulence factor ,hydroxyalkyl-enzyme intermediate ,Substrate Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Rare Diseases ,Structural Biology ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Hydrolase ,Epoxide hydrolase ,Molecular Biology ,Lung ,X-ray crystallography ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Epoxide Hydrolases ,Crystallography ,Binding Sites ,030102 biochemistry & molecular biology ,biology ,Active site ,Biological Sciences ,Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator ,epoxide hydrolase ,030104 developmental biology ,Enzyme ,Infectious Diseases ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,epoxy-fatty acids ,Pseudomonas aeruginosa ,Chemical Sciences ,biology.protein ,X-Ray ,Infection ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Pseudomonas aeruginosa secretes an epoxide hydrolase with catalytic activity that triggers degradation of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) and perturbs other host defense networks. Targets of this CFTR inhibitory factor (Cif) are largely unknown, but include an epoxy-fatty acid. In this class of signaling molecules, chirality can be an important determinant of physiological output and potency. Here we explore the active-site chemistry of this two-step α/β-hydrolase and its implications for an emerging class of virulence enzymes. In combination with hydrolysis data, crystal structures of 15 trapped hydroxyalkyl-enzyme intermediates reveal the stereochemical basis of Cif's substrate specificity, as well as its regioisomeric and enantiomeric preferences. The structuresalso reveal distinct sets of conformational changes that enable the active site to expand dramatically intwo directions, accommodating a surprising arrayof potential physiological epoxide targets. These new substrates may contribute to Cif's diverse effects invivo, and thus to the successof P.aeruginosa and other pathogens during infection.
- Published
- 2017
32. Occurrence of urea-based soluble epoxide hydrolase inhibitors from the plants in the order Brassicales
- Author
-
Bruce D. Hammock, Todd R. Harris, Christophe Morisseau, Seiya Kitamura, Bora Inceoglu, and Vanella, Luca
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Organosulfur Compounds ,lcsh:Medicine ,Plant Science ,Plant Reproduction ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,01 natural sciences ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Drug Metabolism ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Urea ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,lcsh:Science ,Immune Response ,Epoxide Hydrolases ,Chromatography ,Liquid ,Papayas ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Organic Compounds ,Plant Anatomy ,Pain Research ,Thiourea ,Biological activity ,Plants ,Chemistry ,Biochemistry ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Plant Physiology ,Physical Sciences ,Seeds ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Carica ,Research Article ,Epoxide hydrolase 2 ,Sprouts ,General Science & Technology ,Immunology ,Brassicales ,Library Screening ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Fruits ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,03 medical and health sciences ,Signs and Symptoms ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Animals ,Structure–activity relationship ,Pharmacokinetics ,Molecular Biology Techniques ,Molecular Biology ,IC50 ,Inflammation ,Pharmacology ,Molecular Biology Assays and Analysis Techniques ,Spectrum Analysis ,Organic Chemistry ,lcsh:R ,Chemical Compounds ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,Rats ,0104 chemical sciences ,010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistry ,030104 developmental biology ,Solubility ,chemistry ,Brassicaceae ,lcsh:Q ,Sprague-Dawley ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
Recently, dibenzylurea-based potent soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH) inhibitors were identified in Pentadiplandra brazzeana, a plant in the order Brassicales. In an effort to generalize the concept, we hypothesized that plants that produce benzyl glucosinolates and corresponding isothiocyanates also produce these dibenzylurea derivatives. Our overall aim here was to examine the occurrence of urea derivatives in Brassicales, hoping to find biologically active urea derivatives from plants. First, plants in the order Brassicales were analyzed for the presence of 1, 3-dibenzylurea (compound 1), showing that three additional plants in the order Brassicales produce the urea derivatives. Based on the hypothesis, three dibenzylurea derivatives with sEH inhibitory activity were isolated from maca (Lepidium meyenii) roots. Topical application of one of the identified compounds (compound 3, human sEH IC50 = 222 nM) effectively reduced pain in rat inflammatory pain model, and this compound was bioavailable after oral administration in mice. The biosynthetic pathway of these urea derivatives was investigated using papaya (Carica papaya) seed as a model system. Finally, a small collection of plants from the Brassicales order was grown, collected, extracted and screened for sEH inhibitory activity. Results show that several plants of the Brassicales order could be potential sources of urea-based sEH inhibitors.
- Published
- 2017
33. Structural requirement and stereospecificity of tetrahydroquinolines as potent ecdysone agonists
- Author
-
Yoshiaki Nakagawa, Ryo Shimizu, Hisashi Miyagawa, Seiya Kitamura, Hajime Hiramatsu, and Toshiyuki Harada
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Tetrahydroquinoline ,Larvicide ,Ecdysone ,Insecta ,Stereochemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Crystal structure ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Biochemistry ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Stereospecificity ,Mosquito ,In vivo ,Drug Discovery ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Molecular Structure ,Organic Chemistry ,In vitro ,Chiral column chromatography ,chemistry ,Quinolines ,Molecular Medicine ,Enantiomer ,Ecdysone receptor - Abstract
Tetrahydroquinoline (THQ)-type compounds are a class of potential larvicides against mosquitoes. The structure–activity relationships (SAR) of these compounds were previously investigated (Smith et al., Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. 2003, 13, 1943–1946), and one of cis-forms (with respect to the configurations of 2-methyl and 4-anilino substitutions on the THQ basic structure) was stereoselectively synthesized. However, the absolute configurations of C2 and C4 were not determined. In this study, four THQ-type compounds with cis configurations were synthesized, and two were submitted for X-ray crystal structure analysis. This analysis demonstrated that two enantiomers are packed into the crystal form. We synthesized the cis-form of the fluorinated THQ compound, according to the published method, and the enantiomers were separated via chiral HPLC. The absolute configurations of the enantiomers were determined by X-ray crystallography. Each of the enantiomers was tested for activity against mosquito larvae in vivo and competitive binding to the ecdysone receptor in vitro. Compared to the (2S,4R) enantiomer, the (2R,4S) enantiomer showed 55 times higher activity in the mosquito larvicidal assay, and 36 times higher activity in the competitive receptor binding assay.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. An influenza A hemagglutinin small-molecule fusion inhibitor identified by a new high-throughput fluorescence polarization screen.
- Author
-
Yao Yao, Kadam, Rameshwar U., Chang-Chun David Lee, Woehl, Jordan L., Wu, Nicholas C., Xueyong Zhu, Seiya Kitamura, Wilson, Ian A., and Wolan, Dennis W.
- Subjects
INFLUENZA ,SMALL molecules ,VACCINE development ,MEMBRANE fusion ,FLUORESCENCE - Abstract
Influenza hemagglutinin (HA) glycoprotein is the primary surface antigen targeted by the host immune response and a focus for development of novel vaccines, broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs), and therapeutics. HA enables viral entry into host cells via receptor binding and membrane fusion and is a validated target for drug discovery. However, to date, only a very few bona fide small molecules have been reported against the HA. To identity new antiviral lead candidates against the highly conserved fusion machinery in the HA stem, we synthesized a fluorescence-polarization probe based on a recently described neutralizing cyclic peptide P7 derived from the complementarity-determining region loops of human bnAbs FI6v3 and CR9114 against the HA stem. We then designed a robust binding assay compatible with high-throughput screening to identify molecules with low micromolar to nanomolar affinity to influenza A group 1 HAs. Our simple, low-cost, and efficient in vitro assay was used to screen H1/Puerto Rico/8/1934 (H1/PR8) HA trimer against ~72,000 compounds. The crystal structure of H1/PR8 HA in complex with our best hit compound F0045(S) confirmed that it binds to pockets in the HA stem similar to bnAbs FI6v3 and CR9114, cyclic peptide P7, and small-molecule inhibitor JNJ4796. F0045 is enantioselective against a panel of group 1 HAs and F0045(S) exhibits in vitro neutralization activity against multiple H1N1 and H5N1 strains. Our assay, compound characterization, and small-molecule candidate should further stimulate the discovery and development of new compounds with unique chemical scaffolds and enhanced influenza antiviral capabilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Diversity Oriented Clicking (DOC): Divergent Synthesis of SuFExable Pharmacophores from 2-Substituted-Alkynyl-1-Sulfonyl Fluoride (SASF) Hubs.
- Author
-
Smedley, Christopher J., Gencheng Li, Barrow, Andrew S., Gialelis, Timothy L., Giel, Marie-Claire, Ottonello, Alessandra, Yunfei Cheng, Seiya Kitamura, Wolan, Dennis W., Sharpless, K. Barry, and Moses, John E.
- Subjects
CLICK chemistry ,FLUORIDES ,SULFONYL group ,DIOLEFINS ,DERIVATIZATION - Abstract
Diversity Oriented Clicking (DOC) is a unified click‐approach for the modular synthesis of lead‐like structures through application of the wide family of click transformations. DOC evolved from the concept of achieving “diversity with ease”, by combining classic C−C π‐bond click chemistry with recent developments in connective SuFEx‐technologies. We showcase 2‐Substituted‐Alkynyl‐1‐Sulfonyl Fluorides (SASFs) as a new class of connective hub in concert with a diverse selection of click‐cycloaddition processes. Through the selective DOC of SASFs with a range of dipoles and cyclic dienes, we report a diverse click‐library of 173 unique functional molecules in minimal synthetic steps. The SuFExable library comprises 10 discrete heterocyclic core structures derived from 1,3‐ and 1,5‐dipoles; while reaction with cyclic dienes yields several three‐dimensional bicyclic Diels–Alder adducts. Growing the library to 278 discrete compounds through late‐stage modification was made possible through SuFEx click derivatization of the pendant sulfonyl fluoride group in 96 well‐plates—demonstrating the versatility of the DOC approach for the rapid synthesis of diverse functional structures. Screening for function against MRSA (USA300) revealed several lead hits with improved activity over methicillin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Seeing Is Believing: Visualizing Hydrolysis and Inhibition of an Epoxide Hydrolase Virulence Factor
- Author
-
Sophie Moreau-Marquis, Seiya Kitamura, Bruce D. Hammock, Jennifer M. Bomberger, Christophe Morisseau, Christopher D. Bahl, Bruce A. Stanton, Dean R. Madden, and Kelli L. Hvorecny
- Subjects
Hydrolysis ,Biochemistry ,Chemistry ,Genetics ,Epoxide hydrolase ,Molecular Biology ,Virulence factor ,Biotechnology - Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Potent Natural Soluble Epoxide Hydrolase Inhibitors from Pentadiplandra brazzeana Baillon: Synthesis, Quantification, and Measurement of Biological Activities In Vitro and In Vivo
- Author
-
Gina Rosalinda De Nicola, Christophe Morisseau, Shizuo G. Kamita, Bruce D. Hammock, Seiya Kitamura, Maximilienne Ascension Nyegue, Bora Inceoglu, Oberer, Monika, Kitamura, Seiya, Morisseau, Christophe, Inceoglu, Bora, Kamita, Shizuo G, De Nicola, Gina R, Nyegue, Maximilienne, and Hammock, Bruce D
- Subjects
Epoxide hydrolase 2 ,General Science & Technology ,lcsh:Medicine ,Plant Roots ,Nociceptive Pain ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry ,In vivo ,law ,Animals ,Humans ,Pain Management ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Rosales ,lcsh:Science ,IC50 ,Pentadiplandra ,Epoxide Hydrolases ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Animal ,Chemistry ,Epoxide Hydrolase ,lcsh:R ,Pain Research ,Plant Root ,biology.organism_classification ,In vitro ,Rats ,Disease Models, Animal ,Biochemistry ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Disease Models ,cardiovascular system ,Recombinant DNA ,Urea ,Rat ,lcsh:Q ,Rosale ,Chronic Pain ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Human ,Research Article - Abstract
We describe here three urea-based soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH) inhibitors from the root of the plant Pentadiplandra brazzeana. The concentration of these ureas in the root was quantified by LC-MS/MS, showing that 1, 3-bis (4-methoxybenzyl) urea (MMU) is the most abundant (42.3 mu g/g dry root weight). All of the ureas were chemically synthesized, and their inhibitory activity toward recombinant human and recombinant rat sEH was measured. The most potent compound, MMU, showed an IC50 of 92 nM via fluorescent assay and a Ki of 54 nM via radioactivity-based assay on human sEH. MMU effectively reduced inflammatory pain in a rat nociceptive pain assay. These compounds are among the most potent sEH inhibitors derived from natural sources. Moreover, inhibition of sEH by these compounds may mechanistically explain some of the therapeutic effects of P. brazzeana.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.