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Articles 1 - 30 of 176
Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
An Evaluation Of Coating Material Dependent Toxicity Of Silver Nanoparticles, Thilini Upekshika Silva
An Evaluation Of Coating Material Dependent Toxicity Of Silver Nanoparticles, Thilini Upekshika Silva
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) synthesized using numerous types of coating materials may exhibit different toxicity effects. The study evaluated coating material dependent toxicity by selecting 3 types of AgNP synthesis methods with different coating materials (citrate, polyvinyl pyrrolidone, and branched polyethyleneimine, coated AgNPs as citrate-AgNPs, PVP-AgNPs, and BPEI-AgNPs respectively). Two acute aquatic toxicity tests were performed; 48hr D. magna and MetPLATE E. coli toxicity tests. Significantly different toxicity effects were observed in D. magna test exhibiting lethal median concentrations (LC50) for citrate-AgNPs, PVP-AgNPs, and BPEI AgNPs respectively as, 2.7, 11.2, and 0.57μg/L. Median inhibitory concentrations (EC50) for MetPLATE tests were 1.27, …
Antiviral Activity Of Four Types Of Bioflavonoid Against Dengue Virus Type-2, Wong Pooi Fong
Antiviral Activity Of Four Types Of Bioflavonoid Against Dengue Virus Type-2, Wong Pooi Fong
Wong Pooi Fong
Background: Dengue is a major mosquito-borne disease currently with no effective antiviral or vaccine available. Effort to find antivirals for it has focused on bioflavonoids, a plant-derived polyphenolic compounds with many potential health benefits. In the present study, antiviral activity of four types of bioflavonoid against dengue virus type -2 (DENV-2) in Vero cell was evaluated. Anti-dengue activity of these compounds was determined at different stages of DENV-2 infection and replication cycle. DENV replication was measured by Foci Forming Unit Reduction Assay (FFURA) and quantitative RT-PCR. Selectivity Index value (SI) was determined as the ratio of cytotoxic concentration 50 (CC50) …
Optimal Protein Extraction Methods From Diverse Sample Types For Protein Profiling By Using Two-Dimensional Electrophoresis (2de), Kiew Lik Voon
Optimal Protein Extraction Methods From Diverse Sample Types For Protein Profiling By Using Two-Dimensional Electrophoresis (2de), Kiew Lik Voon
Kiew Lik Voon
There is a great diversity of protein samples types and origins, therefore the optimal procedure for each sample type must be determined empirically. In order to obtain a reproducible and complete sample presentation which view as many proteins as possible on the desired 2DE gel, it is critical to perform additional sample preparation steps to improve the quality of the final results, yet without selectively losing the proteins. To address this, we developed a general method that is suitable for diverse sample types based on phenol-chloroform extraction method (represented by TRI reagent). This method was found to yield good results …
Modelling Β2ar Regulation, Sharat J. Vayttaden
Modelling Β2ar Regulation, Sharat J. Vayttaden
Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)
The β2 adrenergic receptor (β2AR) regulates smooth muscle relaxation in the vasculature and airways. Long- and Short-acting β-agonists (LABAs/SABAs) are widely used in treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD) and asthma. Despite their widespread clinical use we do not understand well the dominant β2AR regulatory pathways that are stimulated during therapy and bring about tachyphylaxis, which is the loss of drug effects. Thus, an understanding of how the β2AR responds to various β-agonists is crucial to their rational use. Towards that end we have developed deterministic models that explore the mechanism of drug- induced β2AR regulation. These mathematical models …
Degradation Of Atrazine By White Rot And Soil Fungi, Gerald Presley
Degradation Of Atrazine By White Rot And Soil Fungi, Gerald Presley
Undergraduate Honors Theses
The widespread use of atrazine in agriculture has lead to an abundance of this toxic chemical in the environment. Fungi that have the ability to degrade atrazine into less toxic products have been identified and used in the remediation of atrazine. In this study atrazine degradation in a defined liquid media was characterized in a diverse group of white rot basidiomycete and deuteromycete soil fungi. Atrazine did not have an effect on fungal growth although each species produced a different amount of biomass in culture. Statistical analysis showed that biomass production was an important factor in determining the amount of …
Part I, Unified Pharmacophore Protein Models Of The Benzodiazepine Receptor Subtypes ; Part Ii, Subtype, Terrill S. Clayton
Part I, Unified Pharmacophore Protein Models Of The Benzodiazepine Receptor Subtypes ; Part Ii, Subtype, Terrill S. Clayton
Theses and Dissertations
Part I. New models of unified pharmacophore/receptors have been constructed guided by the synthesis of subtype selective compounds in light of recent developments both in ligand synthesis and structural studies of the binding site itself. The evaluation of experimental data in combination with comparative models of the α1β2γ2, α2β2γ2, α3β2γ2 and α5β2γ2 GABA(A) receptors has led to an orientation of the pharmacophore model within the benzodiazepine binding site (Bz BS). These results not only are important for the rational design of new selective ligands, but also for the identification and evaluation of possible roles which specific residues may have within …
Living With Emerging Contaminants: Proteomics Of 4-Nonylphenol Exposed Arrow Goby (Clevelandia Ios), Sarah Emily Johnson
Living With Emerging Contaminants: Proteomics Of 4-Nonylphenol Exposed Arrow Goby (Clevelandia Ios), Sarah Emily Johnson
Master's Theses
Alkylphenol ethoxylates (APEs) are widely used in industrial and household products as surfactants. APEs degrade into more toxic ethoxylates, such as 4-nonylphenol (NP), which has been shown to be an endocrine disruptor and enhance the growth of tumor cells. Nonylphenol is wider spread in Pacific estuaries than originally thought. Organisms in Morro Bay, California contain some of the highest concentrations of NP reported, while containing few other contaminants. As a benthic mud-dwelling fish, the arrow goby (Clevelandia ios) may be exposed to high levels of NP due to high contaminant sequestration rates in anaerobic mud. While ecotoxicology suggests …
Store-Operated Calcium Channels In The Function Of Intracardiac Neurons, Timetria Bonds
Store-Operated Calcium Channels In The Function Of Intracardiac Neurons, Timetria Bonds
USF Tampa Graduate Theses and Dissertations
Proper autonomic regulation of mammalian cardiac function is dependent upon very complex and precise communication among the intracardiac ganglia and individual neurons within the ganglia. An array of neuromodulators is found within the ganglia that direct neuronal activity by modulating the movement of calcium. The current study determines that opioidergic agonists, which have been found to contribute to severe cardiac disease states and intracellular calcium mobilization, are also responsible for changes in the function of the intracardiac neuron via their effects on store-operated calcium channels (SOCs).
Previous studies suggest that phosphorylation plays a role in SOC regulation. Using Fura-2 calcium …
Crystal Structure Of Human Thymidylate Synthase: A Structural Mechanism For Guiding Substrates Into The Active Site, Celia Schiffer, Ian Clifton, V. Jo Davisson, Daniel Santi, Robert Stroud
Crystal Structure Of Human Thymidylate Synthase: A Structural Mechanism For Guiding Substrates Into The Active Site, Celia Schiffer, Ian Clifton, V. Jo Davisson, Daniel Santi, Robert Stroud
Celia A. Schiffer
The crystal structure of human thymidylate synthase, a target for anti-cancer drugs, is determined to 3.0 A resolution and refined to a crystallographic residual of 17.8%. The structure implicates the enzyme in a mechanism for facilitating the docking of substrates into the active site. This mechanism involves a twist of approximately 180 degrees of the active site loop, pivoted around the neighboring residues 184 and 204, and implicates ordering of external, eukaryote specific loops along with the well-characterized closure of the active site upon substrate binding. The highly conserved, but eukaryote-specific insertion of twelve residues 90-101 (h117-128), and of eight …
Evaluation Of The Substrate Envelope Hypothesis For Inhibitors Of Hiv-1 Protease, Sripriya Chellappan, Visvaldas Kairys, Miguel Fernandes, Celia Schiffer, Michael Gilson
Evaluation Of The Substrate Envelope Hypothesis For Inhibitors Of Hiv-1 Protease, Sripriya Chellappan, Visvaldas Kairys, Miguel Fernandes, Celia Schiffer, Michael Gilson
Celia A. Schiffer
Crystallographic data show that various substrates of HIV protease occupy a remarkably uniform region within the binding site; this region has been termed the substrate envelope. It has been suggested that an inhibitor that fits within the substrate envelope should tend to evade viral resistance because a protease mutation that reduces the affinity of the inhibitor will also tend to reduce the affinity of substrate, and will hence decrease the activity of the enzyme. Accordingly, inhibitors that fit the substrate envelope better should be less susceptible to clinically observed resistant mutations, since these must also allow substrates to bind. The …
Expression, Purification, And Characterization Of Thymidylate Synthase From Lactococcus Lactis, Patricia Greene, Pak-Lam Yu, Jia Zhao, Celia Schiffer, Daniel Santi
Expression, Purification, And Characterization Of Thymidylate Synthase From Lactococcus Lactis, Patricia Greene, Pak-Lam Yu, Jia Zhao, Celia Schiffer, Daniel Santi
Celia A. Schiffer
The thymidylate synthase (TS) gene from Lactococcus lactis has been highly expressed in Escherichia coli. The TS protein was purified by sequential chromatography on Q-Sepharose and phenyl-Sepharose. Six grams of cell pellet yielded 140 mg of homogeneous TS. TS is a highly conserved enzyme, and several of the conserved amino acid residues that have been implicated in catalytic function are altered in L. lactis TS. By use of a 3-dimensional homology model, we have predicted covariant changes that might compensate for these differences. With the large amounts of L. lactis TS now available, studies can be pursued to understand the …
Investigations Of Peptide Hydration Using Nmr And Molecular Dynamics Simulations: A Study Of Effects Of Water On The Conformation And Dynamics Of Antamanide, Jeffrey Peng, Celia Schiffer, Ping Xu, Wilfred Van Gunsteren, Richard Ernst
Investigations Of Peptide Hydration Using Nmr And Molecular Dynamics Simulations: A Study Of Effects Of Water On The Conformation And Dynamics Of Antamanide, Jeffrey Peng, Celia Schiffer, Ping Xu, Wilfred Van Gunsteren, Richard Ernst
Celia A. Schiffer
The influence of water binding on the conformational dynamics of the cyclic decapeptide antamanide dissolved in the model lipophilic environment chloroform is investigated by NMR relaxation measurements. The water-peptide complex has a lifetime of 35 mgrs at 250 K, which is longer than typical lifetimes of water-peptide complexes reported in aqueous solution. In addition, there is a rapid intracomplex mobility that probably involves librational motions of the bound water or water molecules hopping between different binding sites. Water binding restricts the flexibility of antamanide. The experimental findings are compared with GROMOS molecular dynamics simulations of antamanide with up to eight …
Discovery Of Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors With Picomolar Affinities Incorporating N-Aryl-Oxazolidinone-5-Carboxamides As Novel P2 Ligands, Akbar Ali, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Hong Cao, Saima Anjum, Madhavi Nalam, Celia Schiffer, Tariq Rana
Discovery Of Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors With Picomolar Affinities Incorporating N-Aryl-Oxazolidinone-5-Carboxamides As Novel P2 Ligands, Akbar Ali, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Hong Cao, Saima Anjum, Madhavi Nalam, Celia Schiffer, Tariq Rana
Celia A. Schiffer
Here, we describe the design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of novel HIV-1 protease inhibitors incorporating N-phenyloxazolidinone-5-carboxamides into the (hydroxyethylamino)sulfonamide scaffold as P2 ligands. Series of inhibitors with variations at the P2 phenyloxazolidinone and the P2' phenylsulfonamide moieties were synthesized. Compounds with the (S)-enantiomer of substituted phenyloxazolidinones at P2 show highly potent inhibitory activities against HIV-1 protease. The inhibitors possessing 3-acetyl, 4-acetyl, and 3-trifluoromethyl groups at the phenyl ring of the oxazolidinone fragment are the most potent in each series, with K(i) values in the low picomolar (pM) range. The electron-donating groups 4-methoxy and 1,3-dioxolane are preferred at P2' phenyl ring, …
The Role Of Protein-Solvent Interactions In Protein Unfolding, Celia Schiffer, Volker Dötsch
The Role Of Protein-Solvent Interactions In Protein Unfolding, Celia Schiffer, Volker Dötsch
Celia A. Schiffer
Protein unfolding occurs when the balance of forces between the protein's interaction with itself and the protein's interaction with its environment is disrupted. The disruption of this balance of forces may be as simple as a perturbance of the normal water structure around the protein. A decrease in the normal water-water interaction will result in an increase in the relative interaction of water with the protein. An increase in the number of interactions between water and the protein may initiate a protein's unfolding. This model for protein unfolding is supported by a range of recent experimental and computational data.
Association Of A Novel Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease Substrate Cleft Mutation, L23i, With Protease Inhibitor Therapy And In Vitro Drug Resistance, Elizabeth Johnston, Mark Winters, Soo-Yon Rhee, Thomas Merigan, Celia Schiffer, Robert Shafer
Association Of A Novel Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease Substrate Cleft Mutation, L23i, With Protease Inhibitor Therapy And In Vitro Drug Resistance, Elizabeth Johnston, Mark Winters, Soo-Yon Rhee, Thomas Merigan, Celia Schiffer, Robert Shafer
Celia A. Schiffer
We observed a previously uncharacterized mutation in the protease substrate cleft, L23I, in 31 of 4,303 persons undergoing human immunodeficiency virus type 1 genotypic resistance testing. In combination with V82I, L23I was associated with a sevenfold reduction in nelfinavir susceptibility and a decrease in replication capacity. In combination with other drug resistance mutations, L23I was associated with multidrug resistance and a compensatory increase in replication capacity.
Reca Dimers Serve As A Functional Unit For Assembly Of Active Nucleoprotein Filaments, Anthony Forget, Michelle Kudron, Dharia Mcgrew, Melissa Calmann, Celia Schiffer, Kendall Knight
Reca Dimers Serve As A Functional Unit For Assembly Of Active Nucleoprotein Filaments, Anthony Forget, Michelle Kudron, Dharia Mcgrew, Melissa Calmann, Celia Schiffer, Kendall Knight
Celia A. Schiffer
All RecA-like recombinase enzymes catalyze DNA strand exchange as elongated filaments on DNA. Despite numerous biochemical and structural studies of RecA and the related Rad51 and RadA proteins, the unit oligomer(s) responsible for nucleoprotein filament assembly and coordinated filament activity remains undefined. We have created a RecA fused dimer protein and show that it maintains in vivo DNA repair and LexA co-protease activities, as well as in vitro ATPase and DNA strand exchange activities. Our results support the idea that dimeric RecA is an important functional unit both for assembly of nucleoprotein filaments and for their coordinated activity during the …
Substrate Shape Determines Specificity Of Recognition For Hiv-1 Protease: Analysis Of Crystal Structures Of Six Substrate Complexes, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Ellen Nalivaika, Celia Schiffer
Substrate Shape Determines Specificity Of Recognition For Hiv-1 Protease: Analysis Of Crystal Structures Of Six Substrate Complexes, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Ellen Nalivaika, Celia Schiffer
Celia A. Schiffer
The homodimeric HIV-1 protease is the target of some of the most effective antiviral AIDS therapy, as it facilitates viral maturation by cleaving ten asymmetric and nonhomologous sequences in the Gag and Pol polyproteins. Since the specificity of this enzyme is not easily determined from the sequences of these cleavage sites alone, we solved the crystal structures of complexes of an inactive variant (D25N) of HIV-1 protease with six peptides that correspond to the natural substrate cleavage sites. When the protease binds to its substrate and buries nearly 1000 A2 of surface area, the symmetry of the protease is broken, …
Accounting For Molecular Mobility In Structure Determination Based On Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic And X-Ray Diffraction Data, Wilfred Van Gunsteren, Roger Brunne, P. Gros, René Van Schaik, Celia Schiffer, Andrew Torda
Accounting For Molecular Mobility In Structure Determination Based On Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic And X-Ray Diffraction Data, Wilfred Van Gunsteren, Roger Brunne, P. Gros, René Van Schaik, Celia Schiffer, Andrew Torda
Celia A. Schiffer
No abstract provided.
Substrate Specificity In Hiv-1 Protease By A Biased Sequence Search Method, Nevra Ozer, Turkan Haliloglu, Celia Schiffer
Substrate Specificity In Hiv-1 Protease By A Biased Sequence Search Method, Nevra Ozer, Turkan Haliloglu, Celia Schiffer
Celia A. Schiffer
Drug resistance in HIV-1 protease can also occasionally confer a change in the substrate specificity. Through the use of computational techniques, a relationship can be determined between the substrate sequence and three-dimensional structure of HIV-1 protease, and be utilized to predict substrate specificity. In this study, we introduce a biased sequence search threading (BSST) methodology to analyze the preferences of substrate positions and correlations between them that might also identify which positions within known substrates can likely tolerate sequence variability and which cannot. The potential sequence space was efficiently explored using a low-resolution knowledge-based scoring function. The low-energy substrate sequences …
Additivity In The Analysis And Design Of Hiv Protease Inhibitors, Robert Jorissen, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Akbar Ali, Michael Altman, Sripriya Chellappan, Saima Anjum, Bruce Tidor, Celia Schiffer, Tariq Rana, Michael Gilson
Additivity In The Analysis And Design Of Hiv Protease Inhibitors, Robert Jorissen, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Akbar Ali, Michael Altman, Sripriya Chellappan, Saima Anjum, Bruce Tidor, Celia Schiffer, Tariq Rana, Michael Gilson
Celia A. Schiffer
We explore the applicability of an additive treatment of substituent effects to the analysis and design of HIV protease inhibitors. Affinity data for a set of inhibitors with a common chemical framework were analyzed to provide estimates of the free energy contribution of each chemical substituent. These estimates were then used to design new inhibitors whose high affinities were confirmed by synthesis and experimental testing. Derivations of additive models by least-squares and ridge-regression methods were found to yield statistically similar results. The additivity approach was also compared with standard molecular descriptor-based QSAR; the latter was not found to provide superior …
Insights Into Interferon Regulatory Factor Activation From The Crystal Structure Of Dimeric Irf5, Weijun Chen, Suvana Lam, Hema Srinath, Zhaozhao Jiang, John Correia, Celia Schiffer, Katherine Fitzgerald, Kai Lin, William Royer
Insights Into Interferon Regulatory Factor Activation From The Crystal Structure Of Dimeric Irf5, Weijun Chen, Suvana Lam, Hema Srinath, Zhaozhao Jiang, John Correia, Celia Schiffer, Katherine Fitzgerald, Kai Lin, William Royer
Celia A. Schiffer
Interferon regulatory factors (IRFs) are essential in the innate immune response and other physiological processes. Activation of these proteins in the cytoplasm is triggered by phosphorylation of serine and threonine residues in a C-terminal autoinhibitory region, which stimulates dimerization, transport into the nucleus, assembly with the coactivator CBP/p300 and initiation of transcription. The crystal structure of the transactivation domain of pseudophosphorylated human IRF5 strikingly reveals a dimer in which the bulk of intersubunit interactions involve a highly extended C-terminal region. The corresponding region has previously been shown to block CBP/p300 binding to unphosphorylated IRF3. Mutation of key interface residues supports …
Crystal Structure Of The Apobec3g Catalytic Domain Reveals Potential Oligomerization Interfaces., Shivender Shandilya, Madhavi Nalam, Ellen Nalivaika, Phillip Gross, Johnathan Valesano, Keisuke Shindo, Ming Li, Mary Munson, William Royer, Elena Harjes, Takahide Kono, Hiroshi Matsuo, Reuben Harris, Mohan Somasundaran, Celia Schiffer
Crystal Structure Of The Apobec3g Catalytic Domain Reveals Potential Oligomerization Interfaces., Shivender Shandilya, Madhavi Nalam, Ellen Nalivaika, Phillip Gross, Johnathan Valesano, Keisuke Shindo, Ming Li, Mary Munson, William Royer, Elena Harjes, Takahide Kono, Hiroshi Matsuo, Reuben Harris, Mohan Somasundaran, Celia Schiffer
Celia A. Schiffer
APOBEC3G is a DNA cytidine deaminase that has antiviral activity against HIV-1 and other pathogenic viruses. In this study the crystal structure of the catalytically active C-terminal domain was determined to 2.25 A. This structure corroborates features previously observed in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies, a bulge in the second beta strand and a lengthening of the second alpha helix. Oligomerization is postulated to be critical for the function of APOBEC3G. In this structure, four extensive intermolecular interfaces are observed, suggesting potential models for APOBEC3G oligomerization. The structural and functional significance of these interfaces was probed by solution NMR and …
How Does A Symmetric Dimer Recognize An Asymmetric Substrate? A Substrate Complex Of Hiv-1 Protease, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Ellen Nalivaika, Celia Schiffer
How Does A Symmetric Dimer Recognize An Asymmetric Substrate? A Substrate Complex Of Hiv-1 Protease, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Ellen Nalivaika, Celia Schiffer
Celia A. Schiffer
The crystal structure of an actual HIV-1 protease-substrate complex is presented at 2.0 A resolution (R-value of 19.7 % (R(free) 23.3 %)) between an inactive variant (D25N) of HIV-1 protease and a long substrate peptide, Lys-Ala-Arg-Val-Leu-Ala-Glu-Ala-Met-Ser, which covers a full binding epitope of capsid(CA)-p2, cleavage site. The substrate peptide is asymmetric in both size and charge distribution. To accommodate this asymmetry the two protease monomers adopt different conformations burying a total of 1038 A(2) of surface area at the protease-substrate interface. The specificity for the CA-p2 substrate peptide is mainly hydrophobic, as most of the hydrogen bonds are made with …
Toward The Design Of Mutation-Resistant Enzyme Inhibitors: Further Evaluation Of The Substrate Envelope Hypothesis, Visvaldas Kairys, Michael Gilson, Viney Lather, Celia Schiffer, Miguel Fernandes
Toward The Design Of Mutation-Resistant Enzyme Inhibitors: Further Evaluation Of The Substrate Envelope Hypothesis, Visvaldas Kairys, Michael Gilson, Viney Lather, Celia Schiffer, Miguel Fernandes
Celia A. Schiffer
Previous studies have shown the usefulness of the substrate envelope concept in the analysis and prediction of drug resistance profiles for human immunodeficiency virus protease mutants. This study tests its applicability to several other therapeutic targets: Abl kinase, chitinase, thymidylate synthase, dihydrofolate reductase, and neuraminidase. For the targets where many (> or =6) mutation data are available to compute the average mutation sensitivity of inhibitors, the total volume of an inhibitor molecule that projects outside the substrate envelope V(out), is found to correlate with average mutation sensitivity. Analysis of a locally computed volume suggests that the same correlation would hold …
Inclusion Of Solvation Free Energy With Molecular Mechanics Energy: Alanyl Dipeptide As A Test Case, Celia Schiffer, James Caldwell, Robert Stroud, Peter Kollman
Inclusion Of Solvation Free Energy With Molecular Mechanics Energy: Alanyl Dipeptide As A Test Case, Celia Schiffer, James Caldwell, Robert Stroud, Peter Kollman
Celia A. Schiffer
A combined force field of molecular mechanics and solvation free energy is tested by carrying out energy minimization and molecular dynamics on several conformations of the alanyl dipeptide. Our results are qualitatively consistent with previous experimental and computational studies, in that the addition of solvation energy stabilizes the C5 conformation of the alanyl dipeptide relative to the C7.
Design Of Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors Active On Multidrug-Resistant Virus, Dominique Surleraux, Herman De Kock, Wim Verschueren, Geert Pille, Louis Maes, Anik Peeters, Sandrine Vendeville, Sandra De Meyer, Hilde Azijn, Rudi Pauwels, Marie-Pierre De Bethune, Nancy King, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Celia Schiffer, Piet Wigerinck
Design Of Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors Active On Multidrug-Resistant Virus, Dominique Surleraux, Herman De Kock, Wim Verschueren, Geert Pille, Louis Maes, Anik Peeters, Sandrine Vendeville, Sandra De Meyer, Hilde Azijn, Rudi Pauwels, Marie-Pierre De Bethune, Nancy King, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Celia Schiffer, Piet Wigerinck
Celia A. Schiffer
On the basis of structural data gathered during our ongoing HIV-1 protease inhibitors program, from which our clinical candidate TMC114 9 was selected, we have discovered new series of fused heteroaromatic sulfonamides. The further extension into the P2' region was aimed at identifying new classes of compounds with an improved broad spectrum activity and acceptable pharmacokinetic properties. Several of these compounds display an exceptional broad spectrum activity against a panel of highly cross-resistant mutants. Certain members of these series exhibit favorable pharmacokinetic profiles in rat and dog. Crystal structures and molecular modeling were used to rationalize the broad spectrum profile …
Pten Enters The Nucleus By Diffusion, Fenghua Liu, Stefan Wagner, Robert Campbell, Jeffrey Nickerson, Celia Schiffer, Alonzo Ross
Pten Enters The Nucleus By Diffusion, Fenghua Liu, Stefan Wagner, Robert Campbell, Jeffrey Nickerson, Celia Schiffer, Alonzo Ross
Celia A. Schiffer
Despite much evidence for phosphatidylinositol phosphate (PIP)-triggered signaling pathways in the nucleus, there is little understanding of how the levels and activities of these proteins are regulated. As a first step to elucidating this problem, we determined whether phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome 10 (PTEN) enters the nucleus by passive diffusion or active transport. We expressed various PTEN fusion proteins in tsBN2, HeLa, LNCaP, and U87MG cells and determined that the largest PTEN fusion proteins showed little or no nuclear localization. Because diffusion through nuclear pores is limited to proteins of 60,000 Da or less, this suggests that …
Protein Structure Prediction With A Combined Solvation Free Energy-Molecular Mechanics Force Field, Celia Schiffer, James Caldwell, Peter Kollman, Robert Stroud
Protein Structure Prediction With A Combined Solvation Free Energy-Molecular Mechanics Force Field, Celia Schiffer, James Caldwell, Peter Kollman, Robert Stroud
Celia A. Schiffer
Models of protein structure are frequently used to determine the physical characteristics of a protein when the crystal structure is not available. We developed a procedure to optimize such models, by use of a combined solvation free energy and molecular mechanics force field. Appropriately chosen atomic solvation parameters were defined using the criterion that the resulting protein model should deviate least from the crystal structure upon a forty picosecond molecular dynamics simulation carried out using the combined force field. Several tests were performed to refine the set of atomic solvation parameters which best complement the molecular mechanics forces. Four sets …
N88d Facilitates The Co-Occurrence Of D30n And L90m And The Development Of Multidrug Resistance In Hiv Type 1 Protease Following Nelfinavir Treatment Failure, Yumi Mitsuya, Mark Winters, W. Jeffrey Fessel, Soo-Yon Rhee, Leo Hurley, Michael Horberg, Celia Schiffer, Andrew Zolopa, Robert Shafer
N88d Facilitates The Co-Occurrence Of D30n And L90m And The Development Of Multidrug Resistance In Hiv Type 1 Protease Following Nelfinavir Treatment Failure, Yumi Mitsuya, Mark Winters, W. Jeffrey Fessel, Soo-Yon Rhee, Leo Hurley, Michael Horberg, Celia Schiffer, Andrew Zolopa, Robert Shafer
Celia A. Schiffer
Nelfinavir was once one of the most commonly used protease inhibitors (PIs). To investigate the genetic mechanisms of multidrug resistance in protease isolates with the primary nelfinavir resistance mutation D30N, we analyzed patterns of protease mutations in 582 viruses with D30N from 460 persons undergoing HIV-1 genotypic resistance testing at Stanford University Hospital from 1997 to 2005. Three patterns of mutational associations were identified. First, D30N was positively associated with N88D but negatively associated with N88S. Second, D30N and L90M were negatively associated except in the presence of N88D, which facilitated the co-occurrence of D30N and L90M. Third, D30N+N88D+L90M formed …
Cooperative Fluctuations Of Unliganded And Substrate-Bound Hiv-1 Protease: A Structure-Based Analysis On A Variety Of Conformations From Crystallography And Molecular Dynamics Simulations, Nese Kurt, Walter Scott, Celia Schiffer, Turkan Haliloglu
Cooperative Fluctuations Of Unliganded And Substrate-Bound Hiv-1 Protease: A Structure-Based Analysis On A Variety Of Conformations From Crystallography And Molecular Dynamics Simulations, Nese Kurt, Walter Scott, Celia Schiffer, Turkan Haliloglu
Celia A. Schiffer
The dynamics of HIV-1 protease, both in unliganded and substrate-bound forms have been analyzed by using an analytical method, Gaussian network model (GNM). The method is applied to different conformations accessible to the protein backbone in the native state, observed in crystal structures and snapshots from fully atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulation trajectories. The modes of motion obtained from GNM on different conformations of HIV-1 protease are conserved throughout the MD simulations. The flaps and 40's loop of the unliganded HIV-1 protease structure are identified as the most mobile regions. However, in the liganded structure these flaps lose mobility, and …