Daniel Thomas

Daniel Thomas

Kingsbridge, England, United Kingdom
4K followers 500+ connections

About

With a career deeply rooted in drug discovery and a focus on digital transformation at…

Experience

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    Resilient Collective

    United Kingdom

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    Kingsbridge, England, United Kingdom

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    Oxford, England, United Kingdom

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    Oxford, United Kingdom

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    Stevenage, United Kingdom

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    Stevenage, United Kingdom

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    Stevenage

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    Stevenage

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    Harlow

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Education

  • Leeds University

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    Activities and Societies: President Leeds University Union Biochemical Society (July-Dec 2002)

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Licenses & Certifications

Publications

  • A kinetic intra-cellular assay (KICA) to measure quantitative compound binding kinetics within living cells

    STAR Protocols

    The Kinetic Intra-Cellular Assay (KICA) is a recombinant cell-based technique that utilizes NanoBRET technology. KICA enables the measurement of intracellular binding kinetics. This protocol describes steps for cellular transfection and expression, followed by addition of a target specific fluorophore conjugated probe and a range of concentrations of competitor compounds, followed by the measurement of BRET in a 384 well format. Fitting the BRET data allows measurement of forward and reverse…

    The Kinetic Intra-Cellular Assay (KICA) is a recombinant cell-based technique that utilizes NanoBRET technology. KICA enables the measurement of intracellular binding kinetics. This protocol describes steps for cellular transfection and expression, followed by addition of a target specific fluorophore conjugated probe and a range of concentrations of competitor compounds, followed by the measurement of BRET in a 384 well format. Fitting the BRET data allows measurement of forward and reverse binding rates and the determination of KD.

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  • Investigation of Janus Kinase (JAK) Inhibitors for Lung Delivery and the Importance of Aldehyde Oxidase Metabolism

    ACS Journal of Medicinal Chemistry

    The Janus family of tyrosine kinases (JAK1, JAK2, JAK3, and TYK2) play an essential role in the receptor signaling of cytokines that have been implicated in the pathogenesis of severe asthma, and there is emerging interest in the development of small-molecule-inhaled JAK inhibitors as treatments. Here, we describe the optimization of a quinazoline series of JAK inhibitors and the results of mouse lung pharmacokinetic (PK) studies where only low concentrations of parent compound were observed…

    The Janus family of tyrosine kinases (JAK1, JAK2, JAK3, and TYK2) play an essential role in the receptor signaling of cytokines that have been implicated in the pathogenesis of severe asthma, and there is emerging interest in the development of small-molecule-inhaled JAK inhibitors as treatments. Here, we describe the optimization of a quinazoline series of JAK inhibitors and the results of mouse lung pharmacokinetic (PK) studies where only low concentrations of parent compound were observed. Subsequent investigations revealed that the low exposure was due to metabolism by aldehyde oxidase (AO), so we sought to identify quinazolines that were not metabolized by AO. We found that specific substituents at the quinazoline 2-position prevented AO metabolism and this was rationalized through computational docking studies in the AO binding site, but they compromised kinome selectivity. Results presented here highlight that AO metabolism is a potential issue in the lung.

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  • Kinetic intracellular assay measures compound binding kinetics at intracellular targets within living cells

    Future Drug Discovery

    The significance of measuring association and dissociation rates (kon and koff) in addition the dissociation constant (KD) when designing and developing new chemical entities is now widely recognized [1,2]. Dynamic changes in local drug concentration or target availability in vivo, mean that kinetic parameters may be better predictors of target occupancy. To date however, most drug discovery efforts have been driven by in vitro affinity measurements, conducted in closed systems where the total…

    The significance of measuring association and dissociation rates (kon and koff) in addition the dissociation constant (KD) when designing and developing new chemical entities is now widely recognized [1,2]. Dynamic changes in local drug concentration or target availability in vivo, mean that kinetic parameters may be better predictors of target occupancy. To date however, most drug discovery efforts have been driven by in vitro affinity measurements, conducted in closed systems where the total drug and target concentration remains constant. Effective drug pharmacodynamics depend on the sustained occupancy of the target, given that drugs can only elicit their effects when bound to a target. While affinity is in many cases a good predictor of the lifetime of the drug–target complex, increased target rebinding or reduced rates of drug dissociation could be equally or more important depending on the target’s molecular context. Despite this, high throughput determination of kinetic binding values for test compounds has not been widely pursued in the early stages of drug discovery and development. The level of late-stage compound attrition due to lack of efficacy remains high [3] and the development of compounds with diverse kinetic profiles could be a useful way to improve therapeutic profiles and reduce off target effects.

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  • Development of an intracellular quantitative assay to measure compound binding kinetics

    Cell Chemical Biology

    Contemporary drug discovery typically quantifies the effect of a molecule on a biological target using the equilibrium-derived measurements of IC50, EC50, or KD. Kinetic descriptors of drug binding are frequently linked with the effectiveness of a molecule in modulating a disease phenotype; however, these parameters are yet to be fully adopted in early drug discovery. Nanoluciferase bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (NanoBRET) can be used to measure interactions between…

    Contemporary drug discovery typically quantifies the effect of a molecule on a biological target using the equilibrium-derived measurements of IC50, EC50, or KD. Kinetic descriptors of drug binding are frequently linked with the effectiveness of a molecule in modulating a disease phenotype; however, these parameters are yet to be fully adopted in early drug discovery. Nanoluciferase bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (NanoBRET) can be used to measure interactions between fluorophore-conjugated probes and luciferase fused target proteins. Here, we describe an intracellular NanoBRET competition assay that can be used to quantify cellular kinetic rates of compound binding to nanoluciferase-fused bromodomain and extra-terminal (BET) proteins. Comparative rates are generated using a cell-free NanoBRET assay and by utilizing orthogonal recombinant protein-based methodologies. A screen of known pan-BET inhibitors is used to demonstrate the value of this approach in the investigation of kinetic selectivity between closely related proteins.

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  • Discovery of GSK251: A Highly Potent, Highly Selective, Orally Bioavailable Inhibitor of PI3Kδ with a Novel Binding Mode

    ACS Journal of Medicinal Chemistry

    Optimization of a previously reported lead series of PI3Kδ inhibitors with a novel binding mode led to the identification of a clinical candidate compound 31 (GSK251). Removal of an embedded Ames-positive heteroaromatic amine by reversing a sulfonamide followed by locating an interaction with Trp760 led to a highly selective compound 9. Further optimization to avoid glutathione trapping, to enhance potency and selectivity, and to optimize an oral pharmacokinetic profile led to the discovery of…

    Optimization of a previously reported lead series of PI3Kδ inhibitors with a novel binding mode led to the identification of a clinical candidate compound 31 (GSK251). Removal of an embedded Ames-positive heteroaromatic amine by reversing a sulfonamide followed by locating an interaction with Trp760 led to a highly selective compound 9. Further optimization to avoid glutathione trapping, to enhance potency and selectivity, and to optimize an oral pharmacokinetic profile led to the discovery of compound 31 (GSK215) that had a low predicted daily dose (45 mg, b.i.d) and a rat toxicity profile suitable for further development.

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  • Acetylation of the Catalytic Lysine Inhibits Kinase Activity in PI3Kδ

    ACS Chemical Biology

    Covalent inhibition is a powerful strategy to develop potent and selective small molecule kinase inhibitors. Targeting the conserved catalytic lysine is an attractive method for selective kinase inactivation. We have developed novel, selective inhibitors of phosphoinositide 3-kinase δ (PI3Kδ) which acylate the catalytic lysine, Lys779, using activated esters as the reactive electrophiles. The acylating agents were prepared by adding the activated ester motif to a known selective…

    Covalent inhibition is a powerful strategy to develop potent and selective small molecule kinase inhibitors. Targeting the conserved catalytic lysine is an attractive method for selective kinase inactivation. We have developed novel, selective inhibitors of phosphoinositide 3-kinase δ (PI3Kδ) which acylate the catalytic lysine, Lys779, using activated esters as the reactive electrophiles. The acylating agents were prepared by adding the activated ester motif to a known selective dihydroisobenzofuran PI3Kδ inhibitor. Three esters were designed, including an acetate ester which was the smallest lysine modification evaluated in this work. Covalent binding to the enzyme was characterized by intact protein mass spectrometry of the PI3Kδ-ester adducts. An enzymatic digest coupled with tandem mass spectrometry identified Lys779 as the covalent binding site, and a biochemical activity assay confirmed that PI3Kδ inhibition was a direct result of covalent lysine acylation. These results indicate that a simple chemical modification such as lysine acetylation is sufficient to inhibit kinase activity. The selectivity of the compounds was evaluated against lipid kinases in cell lysates using a chemoproteomic binding assay. Due to the conserved nature of the catalytic lysine across the kinome, we believe the covalent inhibition strategy presented here could be applicable to a broad range of clinically relevant targets.

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  • Design and Development of a Macrocyclic Series Targeting Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase

    ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters

    A macrocyclization approach has been explored on a series of benzoxazine phosphoinositide 3-kinase δ inhibitors, resulting in compounds with improved potency, permeability, and in vivo clearance while maintaining good solubility. The thermodynamics of binding was explored via surface plasmon resonance, and the binding of lead macrocycle 19 was found to be almost exclusively entropically driven compared with progenitor 18, which demonstrated both enthalpic and entropic contributions. The…

    A macrocyclization approach has been explored on a series of benzoxazine phosphoinositide 3-kinase δ inhibitors, resulting in compounds with improved potency, permeability, and in vivo clearance while maintaining good solubility. The thermodynamics of binding was explored via surface plasmon resonance, and the binding of lead macrocycle 19 was found to be almost exclusively entropically driven compared with progenitor 18, which demonstrated both enthalpic and entropic contributions. The pharmacokinetics of macrocycle 19 was also explored in vivo, where it showed reduced clearance when compared with the progenitor 18. This work adds to the growing body of evidence that macrocyclization could provide an alternative and complementary approach to the design of small-molecule inhibitors, with the potential to deliver differentiated properties.

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  • Optimization of Orally Bioavailable PI3Kd Inhibitors and Identification of Vps34 as a key off-target activity

    Journal of Medicinal Chemistry

    Optimisation of a lead series of PI3Kδ inhibitors based on a dihydroisobenzofuran core led to the identification of potent, orally bioavailable compound 19. Selectivity profiling of compound 19 showed similar potency for the class III PI3K, Vps34, as for PI3Kδ and compound 19 was not well-tolerated in a 7 day rat toxicity study. Structure-based design led to an improvement in selectivity for PI3Kδ over Vps34 and a focus on oral PK properties resulted in the discovery of compound 41, which…

    Optimisation of a lead series of PI3Kδ inhibitors based on a dihydroisobenzofuran core led to the identification of potent, orally bioavailable compound 19. Selectivity profiling of compound 19 showed similar potency for the class III PI3K, Vps34, as for PI3Kδ and compound 19 was not well-tolerated in a 7 day rat toxicity study. Structure-based design led to an improvement in selectivity for PI3Kδ over Vps34 and a focus on oral PK properties resulted in the discovery of compound 41, which showed improved toxicological outcomes at similar exposures to compound 19.

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  • Fragment-Based Covalent Ligand Screening Enables Rapid Discovery of Inhibitors for the RBR E3 Ubiquitin Ligase HOIP

    Journal of the American Chemical Society

    Modification of proteins with polyubiquitin chains is a key regulatory mechanism to control cellular behavior and alterations in the ubiquitin system are linked to many diseases. Linear (M1-linked) polyubiquitin chains play pivotal roles in several cellular signaling pathways mediating immune and inflammatory responses and apoptotic cell death. These chains are formed by the linear ubiquitin chain assembly complex (LUBAC), a multiprotein E3 ligase that consists of 3 subunits, HOIP, HOIL-1L, and…

    Modification of proteins with polyubiquitin chains is a key regulatory mechanism to control cellular behavior and alterations in the ubiquitin system are linked to many diseases. Linear (M1-linked) polyubiquitin chains play pivotal roles in several cellular signaling pathways mediating immune and inflammatory responses and apoptotic cell death. These chains are formed by the linear ubiquitin chain assembly complex (LUBAC), a multiprotein E3 ligase that consists of 3 subunits, HOIP, HOIL-1L, and SHARPIN. Herein, we describe the discovery of inhibitors targeting the active site cysteine of the catalytic subunit HOIP using fragment-based covalent ligand screening. We report the synthesis of a diverse library of electrophilic fragments and demonstrate an integrated use of protein LC-MS, biochemical ubiquitination assays, chemical synthesis, and protein crystallography to enable the first structure-based development of covalent inhibitors for an RBR E3 ligase. Furthermore, using cell-based assays and chemoproteomics, we demonstrate that these compounds effectively penetrate mammalian cells to label and inhibit HOIP and NF-κB activation, making them suitable hits for the development of selective probes to study LUBAC biology. Our results illustrate the power of fragment-based covalent ligand screening to discover lead compounds for challenging targets, which holds promise to be a general approach for the development of cell-permeable inhibitors of thioester-forming E3 ubiquitin ligases.

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  • Selectively targeting the kinome-conserved lysine of PI3Kδ as a general approach to covalent kinase inhibition

    Journal of the American Chemical Society

    Selective covalent inhibition of kinases by targeting poorly conserved cysteines has proven highly fruitful to date in the development of chemical probes and approved drugs. However, this approach is limited to ~200 kinases possessing such a cysteine near the ATP-binding pocket. Herein, we report a novel approach to achieve selective, irreversible kinase inhibition, by targeting the conserved catalytic lysine residue. We have illustrated our approach by developing selective, covalent PI3Kδ…

    Selective covalent inhibition of kinases by targeting poorly conserved cysteines has proven highly fruitful to date in the development of chemical probes and approved drugs. However, this approach is limited to ~200 kinases possessing such a cysteine near the ATP-binding pocket. Herein, we report a novel approach to achieve selective, irreversible kinase inhibition, by targeting the conserved catalytic lysine residue. We have illustrated our approach by developing selective, covalent PI3Kδ inhibitors that exhibit nanomolar potency in cellular assays, and a duration of action >48 h in CD4+ T cells. Despite conservation of the lysine residue throughout the kinome, the lead compound shows high levels of selectivity over a selection of lipid and protein kinases in biochemical assays, as well as covalent binding to very few off-target proteins in live-cell proteomic studies. We anticipate this approach could offer an alternative general strategy, to targeting non-conserved cysteines, for the development of selective covalent kinase inhibitors.

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  • Assaying kinase activity of the Tpl-2/NF-kB p105/ABIN2 complex using an optimised peptide substrate

    Biochemical Journal

    The MKK1/2 kinase TPL-2 is critical for the production of Tumour Necrosis Factor α (TNF) in innate immune responses and a potential anti-inflammatory drug target. Several earlier pharmaceutical company screens with the isolated TPL-2 kinase domain have identified small molecule inhibitors that specifically block TPL-2 signalling in cells but none of these have progressed to clinical development. We have previously shown that TPL-2 catalytic activity regulates TNF production by macrophages while…

    The MKK1/2 kinase TPL-2 is critical for the production of Tumour Necrosis Factor α (TNF) in innate immune responses and a potential anti-inflammatory drug target. Several earlier pharmaceutical company screens with the isolated TPL-2 kinase domain have identified small molecule inhibitors that specifically block TPL-2 signalling in cells but none of these have progressed to clinical development. We have previously shown that TPL-2 catalytic activity regulates TNF production by macrophages while associated with NF-κB1 p105 and ABIN-2, independently of MKK1/2 phosphorylation via an unknown downstream substrate. In this study, we used a positional scanning peptide library to determine the optimal substrate specificity of a complex of TPL-2, NF-kB1 p105 and ABIN-2. Using an optimal peptide substrate based on this screen and a high-throughput mass spectrometry assay to monitor kinase activity, we found that the TPL-2 complex has significantly altered sensitivities versus existing ATP competitive TPL-2 inhibitors than the isolated TPL-2 kinase domain. These results imply that screens with the more physiologically relevant TPL-2/NF-kB1 p105/ABIN-2 complex have the potential to deliver novel TPL-2 chemical series both ATP competitive and allosteric inhibitors could emerge with significantly improved prospects for development as anti-inflammatory drugs.

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  • From PIM1 to PI3Kδ via GSK3β: Target Hopping through the Kinome

    ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters

    Selective inhibitors of phosphoinositide 3-kinase delta are of interest for the treatment of inflammatory diseases. Initial optimization of a 3-substituted indazole hit compound targeting the kinase PIM1 focused on improving selectivity over GSK3β through consideration of differences in the ATP binding pockets. Continued kinase cross-screening showed PI3Kδ activity in a series of 4,6-disubstituted indazole compounds, and subsequent structure–activity relationship exploration led to the…

    Selective inhibitors of phosphoinositide 3-kinase delta are of interest for the treatment of inflammatory diseases. Initial optimization of a 3-substituted indazole hit compound targeting the kinase PIM1 focused on improving selectivity over GSK3β through consideration of differences in the ATP binding pockets. Continued kinase cross-screening showed PI3Kδ activity in a series of 4,6-disubstituted indazole compounds, and subsequent structure–activity relationship exploration led to the discovery of an indole-containing lead compound as a potent PI3Kδ inhibitor with selectivity over the other PI3K isoforms.

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  • Optimization of Novel Indazoles as Highly Potent and Selective Inhibitors of Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase δ for the Treatment of Respiratory Disease

    Journal of Medicinal Chemistry

    Optimization of lead compound 1, through extensive use of structure-based design and a focus on PI3Kδ potency, isoform selectivity, and inhaled PK properties, led to the discovery of clinical candidates 2 (GSK2269557) and 3 (GSK2292767) for the treatment of respiratory indications via inhalation. Compounds 2 and 3 are both highly selective for PI3Kδ over the closely related isoforms and are active in a disease relevant brown Norway rat acute OVA model of Th2-driven lung inflammation.

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  • Discovery and Biochemical Characterization of Plasmodium Thioredoxin Reductase Inhibitors from an Antimalarial Set

    Biochemistry

    Plasmodium falciparum is the most prevalent and deadly species of the human malaria parasites, and thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) is an enzyme involved in the redox response to oxidative stress. Essential for P. falciparum survival, the enzyme has been highlighted as a promising target for novel antimalarial drugs. Here we report the discovery and characterization of seven molecules from an antimalarial set of 13533 compounds through single-target TrxR biochemical screens. We have produced…

    Plasmodium falciparum is the most prevalent and deadly species of the human malaria parasites, and thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) is an enzyme involved in the redox response to oxidative stress. Essential for P. falciparum survival, the enzyme has been highlighted as a promising target for novel antimalarial drugs. Here we report the discovery and characterization of seven molecules from an antimalarial set of 13533 compounds through single-target TrxR biochemical screens. We have produced high-purity, full-length, recombinant native enzyme from four Plasmodium species, and thioredoxin substrates from P. falciparum and Rattus norvegicus. The enzymes were screened using a unique, high-throughput, in vitro native substrate assay, and we have observed selectivity between the Plasmodium species and the mammalian form of the enzyme. This has indicated differences in their biomolecular profiles and has provided valuable insights into the biochemical mechanisms of action of compounds with proven antimalarial activity.

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  • High-yield production and characterization of biologically active GST-tagged human topoisomerase IIa protein in insect cells for the development of a high-throughput assay

    Protein Expression and Purification

    DNA topoisomerase type II enzymes are well-validated targets of anti-bacterial and anti-cancer compounds. In order to facilitate discovery of these types of inhibitors human topoisomerase II in vitro assays can play an important role to support drug discovery processes. Typically, human topoisomerase IIa proteins have been purified from human cell lines or as untagged proteins from yeast cells. This study reports a method for the rapid over-expression and purification of active GST-tagged human…

    DNA topoisomerase type II enzymes are well-validated targets of anti-bacterial and anti-cancer compounds. In order to facilitate discovery of these types of inhibitors human topoisomerase II in vitro assays can play an important role to support drug discovery processes. Typically, human topoisomerase IIa proteins have been purified from human cell lines or as untagged proteins from yeast cells. This study reports a method for the rapid over-expression and purification of active GST-tagged human topoisomerase IIa using the baculovirus mediated insect cell expression system. Expression of the GST fused protein was observed in the nuclear fraction of insect cells. High yields (40 mg/L i.e. 8 mg/109 cells) at >80% purity of this target was achieved by purification using a GST HiTrap column followed by size exclusion chromatography. Functional activity of GST-tagged human topoisomerase IIa was demonstrated by ATP dependent relaxation of supercoiled DNA in an agarose gel based assay. An 8-fold DNA-dependent increase in ATPase activity of this target compared to its intrinsic activity was also demonstrated in a high-throughput ATPase fluorescence based assay. Human topoisomerase IIa inhibitors etoposide, quercetin and suramin were tested in the fluorescence assay. IC50 values obtained were in good agreement with published data. These inhibitors also demonstrated P30-fold potency over the anti-bacterial topoisomerase II inhibitor ciprofloxacin in the assay. Collectively these data validated the enzyme and the high-throughput fluorescence assay as tools for inhibitor identification and selectivity studies.

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  • Kinetic Analysis of the Inhibition of Matrix Metalloproteinases: Lessons from the Study of Tissue Inhibitors of Metalloproteinases

    Methods in Molecular Biology

    Tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) are a group of highly potent inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and disintegrin metalloproteinases (ADAMs). The high affinity and “tight-binding” nature of the inhibition of MMPs or ADAMs by TIMPs presents challenges for the determination of both equilibrium and dissociation rate constants of these inhibitory events. Methodologies that enable some of these challenges to be overcome are described in this chapter and represent valuable…

    Tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) are a group of highly potent inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and disintegrin metalloproteinases (ADAMs). The high affinity and “tight-binding” nature of the inhibition of MMPs or ADAMs by TIMPs presents challenges for the determination of both equilibrium and dissociation rate constants of these inhibitory events. Methodologies that enable some of these challenges to be overcome are described in this chapter and represent valuable lessons for the in vitro assessment of MMP or ADAM inhibitors within a drug discovery context.

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  • Reactive Oxygen Species-mediated β-Cleavage of the Prion Protein in the Cellular Response to Oxidative Stress

    Journal of Biological Chemistry

    The cellular prion protein (PrPC) is critical for the development of prion diseases. However, the physiological role of PrPC is less clear, although a role in the cellular resistance to oxidative stress has been proposed. PrPC is cleaved at the end of the copper-binding octapeptide repeats through the action of reactive oxygen species (ROS), a process termed β-cleavage. Here we show that ROS-mediated β-cleavage of cell surface PrPC occurs within minutes and was inhibited by the hydroxyl radical…

    The cellular prion protein (PrPC) is critical for the development of prion diseases. However, the physiological role of PrPC is less clear, although a role in the cellular resistance to oxidative stress has been proposed. PrPC is cleaved at the end of the copper-binding octapeptide repeats through the action of reactive oxygen species (ROS), a process termed β-cleavage. Here we show that ROS-mediated β-cleavage of cell surface PrPC occurs within minutes and was inhibited by the hydroxyl radical quencher dimethyl sulfoxide and by an antibody against the octapeptide repeats. A construct of PrP lacking the octapeptide repeats, PrPΔoct, failed to undergo ROS-mediated β-cleavage, as did two mutant forms of PrP, PG14 and A116V, associated with human prion diseases. As compared with cells expressing wild type PrP, when challenged with H2O2 and Cu2+, cells expressing PrPΔoct, PG14, or A116V had reduced viability and glutathione peroxidase activity and increased intracellular free radicals. Thus, lack of ROS-mediated β-cleavage of PrP correlated with the sensitivity of the cells to oxidative stress. These data indicate that the β-cleavage of PrPC is an early and critical event in the mechanism by which PrP protects cells against oxidative stress.

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    • Nicole T. Watt
    • David R. Taylor
    • Andrew Gillott
    • W. Sumudhu S. Perera
    • Nigel M. Hooper
  • A broad-spectrum fluorescence-based peptide library for the rapid identification of protease substrates

    Proteomics

    Identification of peptide substrates for proteases can be a major undertaking. To overcome issues such as feasibility and deconvolution, associated with large peptide libraries, a ‘small but smart’ generic fluorescence resonance energy transfer rapid endopeptidase profiling library (REPLi) was synthesised as a tool for rapidly identifying protease substrates. Within a tripeptide core, flanked by Gly residues, similar amino acids were paired giving rise to a relatively small library of 3375…

    Identification of peptide substrates for proteases can be a major undertaking. To overcome issues such as feasibility and deconvolution, associated with large peptide libraries, a ‘small but smart’ generic fluorescence resonance energy transfer rapid endopeptidase profiling library (REPLi) was synthesised as a tool for rapidly identifying protease substrates. Within a tripeptide core, flanked by Gly residues, similar amino acids were paired giving rise to a relatively small library of 3375 peptides divided into 512 distinct pools each containing only 8 peptides. The REPLi was validated with trypsin, pepsin, the matrix metalloprotease (MMP)-12 and MMP-13 and calpains-1 and -2. In the case of calpain-2, a single iteration step involving LC-MS, provided the definitive residue specificity from which a highly sensitive fluorogenic substrate, (FAM)-Gly-Gly-Gly-Gln-Leu-Tyr-Gly-Gly-DPA-Arg-Arg-Lys-(TAMRA), was then designed. The thorough validation of this ‘small but smart’ peptide library with representatives from each of the four mechanistic protease classes indicates that the REPLi will be useful for the rapid identification of substrates for multiple proteases.

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  • Evaluation of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE), its homologue ACE2

    Biochemical Journal

    In the RAS (renin–angiotensin system), Ang I (angiotensin I) is cleaved by ACE (angiotensin-converting enzyme) to form Ang II (angiotensin II), which has effects on blood pressure, fluid and electrolyte homoeostasis. We have examined the kinetics of angiotensin peptide cleavage by full-length human ACE, the separate N- and C-domains of ACE, the homologue of ACE, ACE2, and NEP (neprilysin). The activity of the enzyme preparations was determined by active-site titrations using competitive…

    In the RAS (renin–angiotensin system), Ang I (angiotensin I) is cleaved by ACE (angiotensin-converting enzyme) to form Ang II (angiotensin II), which has effects on blood pressure, fluid and electrolyte homoeostasis. We have examined the kinetics of angiotensin peptide cleavage by full-length human ACE, the separate N- and C-domains of ACE, the homologue of ACE, ACE2, and NEP (neprilysin). The activity of the enzyme preparations was determined by active-site titrations using competitive tight-binding inhibitors and fluorogenic substrates. Ang I was effectively cleaved by NEP to Ang (1–7) (kcat/Km of 6.2× 105 M−1 • s−1), but was a poor substrate for ACE2 (kcat/Km of 3.3×104 M−1 • s−1). Ang (1–9) was a better substrate for NEP than ACE (kcat/Km of 3.7×105 M−1 • s−1 compared with kcat/Km of 6.8×104 M−1 • s−1). Ang II was cleaved efficiently by ACE2 to Ang (1–7) (kcat/Km of 2.2×106 M−1 • s−1) and was cleaved by NEP
    (kcat/Km of 2.2×105 M−1 • s−1) to several degradation products. In contrast with a previous report, Ang (1–7), like Ang I and Ang (1–9), was cleaved with a similar efficiency by both the N and C-domains of ACE (kcat/Km of 3.6×105 M−1 • s−1 compared with kcat/Km of 3.3×105 M−1 • s−1). The two active sites of ACE exhibited negative cooperativity when either Ang I or Ang (1–7) was the substrate. In addition, a range of ACE inhibitors failed to inhibit ACE2. These kinetic data highlight that the flux of peptides through the RAS is complex, with the levels of ACE, ACE2 and NEP dictating whether vasoconstriction or vasodilation will predominate.

    Other authors
    • Gillian I. Rice
    • Peter J. Grant
    • Anthony J. Turner
    • Nigel M. Hooper

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