I04-1-Macromolecular Crystallography (fixed wavelength)
I24-Microfocus Macromolecular Crystallography
|
Martin A.
Redhead
,
C. David
Owen
,
Lennart
Brewitz
,
Amelia H.
Collette
,
Petra
Lukacik
,
Claire
Strain-Damerell
,
Sean W.
Robinson
,
Patrick M.
Collins
,
Philipp
Schäfer
,
Mark
Swindells
,
Chris J.
Radoux
,
Iva Navratilova
Hopkins
,
Daren
Fearon
,
Alice
Douangamath
,
Frank
Von Delft
,
Tika R.
Malla
,
Laura
Vangeel
,
Thomas
Vercruysse
,
Jan
Thibaut
,
Pieter
Leyssen
,
Tu-Trinh
Nguyen
,
Mitchell
Hull
,
Anthony
Tumber
,
David J.
Hallett
,
Christopher J.
Schofield
,
David I.
Stuart
,
Andrew L.
Hopkins
,
Martin A.
Walsh
Open Access
Abstract: Effective agents to treat coronavirus infection are urgently required, not only to treat COVID-19, but to prepare for future outbreaks. Repurposed anti-virals such as remdesivir and human anti-inflammatories such as barcitinib have received emergency approval but their overall benefits remain unclear. Vaccines are the most promising prospect for COVID-19, but will need to be redeveloped for any future coronavirus outbreak. Protecting against future outbreaks requires the identification of targets that are conserved between coronavirus strains and amenable to drug discovery. Two such targets are the main protease (Mpro) and the papain-like protease (PLpro) which are essential for the coronavirus replication cycle. We describe the discovery of two non-antiviral therapeutic agents, the caspase-1 inhibitor SDZ 224015 and Tarloxotinib that target Mpro and PLpro, respectively. These were identified through extensive experimental screens of the drug repurposing ReFRAME library of 12,000 therapeutic agents. The caspase-1 inhibitor SDZ 224015, was found to be a potent irreversible inhibitor of Mpro (IC50 30 nM) while Tarloxotinib, a clinical stage epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitor, is a sub micromolar inhibitor of PLpro (IC50 300 nM, Ki 200 nM) and is the first reported PLpro inhibitor with drug-like properties. SDZ 224015 and Tarloxotinib have both undergone safety evaluation in humans and hence are candidates for COVID-19 clinical evaluation.
|
Jun 2021
|
|
|
Tika R.
Malla
,
Anthony
Tumber
,
Tobias
John
,
Lennart
Brewitz
,
Claire
Strain-Damerell
,
C. David
Owen
,
Petra
Lukacik
,
H. T. Henry
Chan
,
Pratheesh
Maheswaran
,
Eidarus
Salah
,
Fernanda
Duarte
,
Haitao
Yang
,
Zihe
Rao
,
Martin A.
Walsh
,
Christopher J.
Schofield
Open Access
Abstract: The main viral protease (Mpro) of SARS-CoV-2 is a nucleophilic cysteine hydrolase and a current target for anti-viral chemotherapy. We describe a high-throughput solid phase extraction coupled to mass spectrometry Mpro assay. The results reveal some β-lactams, including penicillin esters, are active site reacting Mpro inhibitors, thus highlighting the potential of acylating agents for Mpro inhibition.
|
Jan 2021
|
|
|
Abstract: This chapter describes the step-by-step methods employed by the Structural Genomics Consortium (SGC) for screening and producing proteins in the baculovirus expression vector system (BEVS). This eukaryotic expression system was selected and a screening process established in 2007 as a measure to tackle the more challenging kinase, RNA–DNA processing, and integral membrane protein families on our target list. Here, we discuss our platform for identifying soluble proteins from 3 mL of insect cell culture and describe the procedures involved in producing protein from liter-scale cultures.
|
Oct 2020
|
|
|
Abstract: In Chapter 3, we described the Structural Genomics Consortium (SGC) process for generating multiple constructs of truncated versions of each protein using LIC. In this chapter we provide a step-by-step procedure of our E. coli system for test expressing intracellular (soluble) proteins in a 96-well format that enables us to identify which proteins or truncated versions are expressed in a soluble and stable form suitable for structural studies. In addition, we detail the process for scaling up cultures for large-scale protein purification. This level of production is required to obtain sufficient quantities (i.e., milligram amounts) of protein for further characterization and/or structural studies (e.g., crystallization or cryo-EM experiments). Our standard process is purification by immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) using nickel resin followed by size exclusion chromatography (SEC), with additional procedures arising from the complexity of the protein itself.
|
Oct 2020
|
|
|
Abstract: Structural genomics groups have identified the need to generate multiple truncated versions of each target to improve their success in producing a well-expressed, soluble, and stable protein and one that crystallizes and diffracts to a sufficient resolution for structural determination. At the Structural Genomics Consortium, we opted for the ligation-independent cloning (LIC) method which provides the throughput we desire to produce and screen many proteins in a parallel process. Here, we describe our LIC protocol for generating constructs in 96-well format and provide a choice of vectors suitable for expressing proteins in both E. coli and the baculovirus expression vector system (BEVS).
|
Oct 2020
|
|
I04-1-Macromolecular Crystallography (fixed wavelength)
I04-Macromolecular Crystallography
|
Alice
Douangamath
,
Daren
Fearon
,
Paul
Gehrtz
,
Tobias
Krojer
,
Petra
Lukacik
,
C. David
Owen
,
Efrat
Resnick
,
Claire
Strain-Damerell
,
Anthony
Aimon
,
Péter
Ábrányi-Balogh
,
Jose
Brandao-Neto
,
Anna
Carbery
,
Gemma
Davison
,
Alexandre
Dias
,
Thomas D.
Downes
,
Louise
Dunnett
,
Michael
Fairhead
,
James D.
Firth
,
S. Paul
Jones
,
Aaron
Keeley
,
György M.
Keserü
,
Hanna F.
Klein
,
Mathew P.
Martin
,
Martin M.
Noble
,
Peter
O’brien
,
Ailsa
Powell
,
Rambabu N.
Reddi
,
Rachael
Skyner
,
Matthew
Snee
,
Michael J.
Waring
,
Conor
Wild
,
Nir
London
,
Frank
Von Delft
,
Martin A.
Walsh
Open Access
Abstract: COVID-19, caused by SARS-CoV-2, lacks effective therapeutics. Additionally, no antiviral drugs or vaccines were developed against the closely related coronavirus, SARS-CoV-1 or MERS-CoV, despite previous zoonotic outbreaks. To identify starting points for such therapeutics, we performed a large-scale screen of electrophile and non-covalent fragments through a combined mass spectrometry and X-ray approach against the SARS-CoV-2 main protease, one of two cysteine viral proteases essential for viral replication. Our crystallographic screen identified 71 hits that span the entire active site, as well as 3 hits at the dimer interface. These structures reveal routes to rapidly develop more potent inhibitors through merging of covalent and non-covalent fragment hits; one series of low-reactivity, tractable covalent fragments were progressed to discover improved binders. These combined hits offer unprecedented structural and reactivity information for on-going structure-based drug design against SARS-CoV-2 main protease.
|
Oct 2020
|
|
B21-High Throughput SAXS
|
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[21035, 10619]
Open Access
Abstract: The core machinery for de novo biosynthesis of iron-sulfur clusters (ISC), located in the mitochondria matrix, is a five-protein complex containing the cysteine desulfurase NFS1 that is activated by frataxin (FXN), scaffold protein ISCU, accessory protein ISD11, and acyl-carrier protein ACP. Deficiency in FXN leads to the loss-of-function neurodegenerative disorder Friedreich’s ataxia (FRDA). Here the 3.2 Å resolution cryo-electron microscopy structure of the FXN-bound active human complex, containing two copies of the NFS1-ISD11-ACP-ISCU-FXN hetero-pentamer, delineates the interactions of FXN with other component proteins of the complex. FXN binds at the interface of two NFS1 and one ISCU subunits, modifying the local environment of a bound zinc ion that would otherwise inhibit NFS1 activity in complexes without FXN. Our structure reveals how FXN facilitates ISC production through stabilizing key loop conformations of NFS1 and ISCU at the protein–protein interfaces, and suggests how FRDA clinical mutations affect complex formation and FXN activation.
|
May 2019
|
|
I04-1-Macromolecular Crystallography (fixed wavelength)
I04-Macromolecular Crystallography
I24-Microfocus Macromolecular Crystallography
|
Yin Yao
Dong
,
Hua
Wang
,
Ashley C. W.
Pike
,
Stephen A.
Cochrane
,
Sadra
Hamedzadeh
,
Filip J.
Wyszyński
,
Simon R.
Bushell
,
Sylvain F.
Royer
,
David A.
Widdick
,
Andaleeb
Sajid
,
Helena I.
Boshoff
,
Yumi
Park
,
Ricardo
Lucas
,
Wei-Min
Liu
,
Seung Seo
Lee
,
Takuya
Machida
,
Leanne
Minall
,
Shahid
Mehmood
,
Katsiaryna
Belaya
,
Wei-Wei
Liu
,
Amy
Chu
,
Leela
Shrestha
,
Shubhashish M. M.
Mukhopadhyay
,
Claire
Strain-Damerell
,
Rod
Chalk
,
Nicola A.
Burgess-Brown
,
Mervyn J.
Bibb
,
Clifton E.
Barry
,
Carol V.
Robinson
,
David
Beeson
,
Benjamin G.
Davis
,
Elizabeth P.
Carpenter
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[10619, 15433, 19301]
Open Access
Abstract: Protein N-glycosylation is a widespread post-translational modification. The first committed step in this process is catalysed by dolichyl-phosphate N-acetylglucosamine-phosphotransferase DPAGT1 (GPT/E.C. 2.7.8.15). Missense DPAGT1 variants cause congenital myasthenic syndrome and disorders of glycosylation. In addition, naturally-occurring bactericidal nucleoside analogues such as tunicamycin are toxic to eukaryotes due to DPAGT1 inhibition, preventing their clinical use. Our structures of DPAGT1 with the substrate UDP-GlcNAc and tunicamycin reveal substrate binding modes, suggest a mechanism of catalysis, provide an understanding of how mutations modulate activity (thus causing disease) and allow design of non-toxic ‘lipid-altered’ tunicamycins. The structure-tuned activity of these analogues against several bacterial targets allowed the design of potent antibiotics for Mycobacterium tuberculosis, enabling treatment in vitro, in cellulo and in vivo, providing a promising new class of antimicrobial drug.
|
Nov 2018
|
|
I04-1-Macromolecular Crystallography (fixed wavelength)
|
Anthony R.
Bradley
,
Aude
Echalier
,
Michael
Fairhead
,
Claire
Strain-Damerell
,
Paul
Brennan
,
Alex n.
Bullock
,
Nicola a.
Burgess-Brown
,
Elizabeth P.
Carpenter
,
Opher
Gileadi
,
Brian d.
Marsden
,
Wen hwa
Lee
,
Wyatt
Yue
,
Chas
Bountra
,
Frank
Von Delft
Open Access
Abstract: The ongoing explosion in genomics data has long since outpaced the capacity of conventional biochemical methodology to verify the large number of hypotheses that emerge from the analysis of such data. In contrast, it is still a gold-standard for early phenotypic validation towards small-molecule drug discovery to use probe molecules (or tool compounds), notwithstanding the difficulty and cost of generating them. Rational structure-based approaches to ligand discovery have long promised the efficiencies needed to close this divergence; in practice, however, this promise remains largely unfulfilled, for a host of well-rehearsed reasons and despite the huge technical advances spearheaded by the structural genomics initiatives of the noughties. Therefore the current, fourth funding phase of the Structural Genomics Consortium (SGC), building on its extensive experience in structural biology of novel targets and design of protein inhibitors, seeks to redefine what it means to do structural biology for drug discovery. We developed the concept of a Target Enabling Package (TEP) that provides, through reagents, assays and data, the missing link between genetic disease linkage and the development of usefully potent compounds. There are multiple prongs to the ambition: rigorously assessing targets’ genetic disease linkages through crowdsourcing to a network of collaborating experts; establishing a systematic approach to generate the protocols and data that comprise each target’s TEP; developing new, X-ray-based fragment technologies for generating high quality chemical matter quickly and cheaply; and exploiting a stringently open access model to build multidisciplinary partnerships throughout academia and industry. By learning how to scale these approaches, the SGC aims to make structures finally serve genomics, as originally intended, and demonstrate how 3D structures systematically allow new modes of druggability to be discovered for whole classes of targets.
|
Nov 2017
|
|
I02-Macromolecular Crystallography
|
Anthony
Tumber
,
Andrea
Nuzzi
,
Edward S.
Hookway
,
Stephanie B.
Hatch
,
Srikannathasan
Velupillai
,
Catrine
Johansson
,
Akane
Kawamura
,
Pavel
Savitsky
,
Clarence
Yapp
,
Aleksandra
Szykowska
,
Na
Wu
,
Chas
Bountra
,
Claire
Strain-Damerell
,
Nicola A.
Burgess-Brown
,
Gian Filippo
Ruda
,
Oleg
Fedorov
,
Shonagh
Munro
,
Katherine S.
England
,
Radoslaw P.
Nowak
,
Christopher J.
Schofield
,
Nicholas B.
La Thangue
,
Charlotte
Pawlyn
,
Faith
Davies
,
Gareth
Morgan
,
Nick
Athanasou
,
Susanne
Müller
,
Udo
Oppermann
,
Paul E.
Brennan
Open Access
Abstract: Methylation of lysine residues on histone tail is a dynamic epigenetic modification that plays a key role in chromatin structure and gene regulation. Members of the KDM5 (also known as JARID1) sub-family are 2-oxoglutarate (2-OG) and Fe2+-dependent oxygenases acting as histone 3 lysine 4 trimethyl (H3K4me3) demethylases, regulating proliferation, stem cell self-renewal, and differentiation. Here we present the characterization of KDOAM-25, an inhibitor of KDM5 enzymes. KDOAM-25 shows biochemical half maximal inhibitory concentration values of <100 nM for KDM5A-D in vitro, high selectivity toward other 2-OG oxygenases sub-families, and no off-target activity on a panel of 55 receptors and enzymes. In human cell assay systems, KDOAM-25 has a half maximal effective concentration of ∼50 μM and good selectivity toward other demethylases. KDM5B is overexpressed in multiple myeloma and negatively correlated with the overall survival. Multiple myeloma MM1S cells treated with KDOAM-25 show increased global H3K4 methylation at transcriptional start sites and impaired proliferation.
|
Mar 2017
|
|