5 results on '"Ahmed, Zamal"'
Search Results
2. Heritable pattern of oxidized DNA base repair coincides with pre-targeting of repair complexes to open chromatin.
- Author
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Bacolla, Albino, Bacolla, Albino, Sengupta, Shiladitya, Ye, Zu, Yang, Chunying, Mitra, Joy, De-Paula, Ruth, Hegde, Muralidhar, Ahmed, Zamal, Mort, Matthew, Cooper, David, Mitra, Sankar, Tainer, John, Bacolla, Albino, Bacolla, Albino, Sengupta, Shiladitya, Ye, Zu, Yang, Chunying, Mitra, Joy, De-Paula, Ruth, Hegde, Muralidhar, Ahmed, Zamal, Mort, Matthew, Cooper, David, Mitra, Sankar, and Tainer, John
- Abstract
Human genome stability requires efficient repair of oxidized bases, which is initiated via damage recognition and excision by NEIL1 and other base excision repair (BER) pathway DNA glycosylases (DGs). However, the biological mechanisms underlying detection of damaged bases among the million-fold excess of undamaged bases remain enigmatic. Indeed, mutation rates vary greatly within individual genomes, and lesion recognition by purified DGs in the chromatin context is inefficient. Employing super-resolution microscopy and co-immunoprecipitation assays, we find that acetylated NEIL1 (AcNEIL1), but not its non-acetylated form, is predominantly localized in the nucleus in association with epigenetic marks of uncondensed chromatin. Furthermore, chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by high-throughput sequencing (ChIP-seq) revealed non-random AcNEIL1 binding near transcription start sites of weakly transcribed genes and along highly transcribed chromatin domains. Bioinformatic analyses revealed a striking correspondence between AcNEIL1 occupancy along the genome and mutation rates, with AcNEIL1-occupied sites exhibiting fewer mutations compared to AcNEIL1-free domains, both in cancer genomes and in population variation. Intriguingly, from the evolutionarily conserved unstructured domain that targets NEIL1 to open chromatin, its damage surveillance of highly oxidation-susceptible sites to preserve essential gene function and to limit instability and cancer likely originated ∼500 million years ago during the buildup of free atmospheric oxygen.
- Published
- 2021
3. An effective human uracil-DNA glycosylase inhibitor targets the open pre-catalytic active site conformation.
- Author
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Nguyen, My, Nguyen, My, Moiani, Davide, Ahmed, Zamal, Arvai, Andrew, Namjoshi, Sarita, Shin, Dave, Fedorov, Yuriy, Selvik, Edward, Jones, Darin, Pink, John, Yan, Yan, Laverty, Daniel, Nagel, Zachary, Tainer, John, Gerson, Stanton, Nguyen, My, Nguyen, My, Moiani, Davide, Ahmed, Zamal, Arvai, Andrew, Namjoshi, Sarita, Shin, Dave, Fedorov, Yuriy, Selvik, Edward, Jones, Darin, Pink, John, Yan, Yan, Laverty, Daniel, Nagel, Zachary, Tainer, John, and Gerson, Stanton
- Abstract
Human uracil DNA-glycosylase (UDG) is the prototypic and first identified DNA glycosylase with a vital role in removing deaminated cytosine and incorporated uracil and 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) from DNA. UDG depletion sensitizes cells to high APOBEC3B deaminase and to pemetrexed (PEM) and floxuridine (5-FdU), which are toxic to tumor cells through incorporation of uracil and 5-FU into DNA. To identify small-molecule UDG inhibitors for pre-clinical evaluation, we optimized biochemical screening of a selected diversity collection of >3,000 small-molecules. We found aurintricarboxylic acid (ATA) as an inhibitor of purified UDG at an initial calculated IC50 < 100 nM. Subsequent enzymatic assays confirmed effective ATA inhibition but with an IC50 of 700 nM and showed direct binding to the human UDG with a KD of <700 nM. ATA displays preferential, dose-dependent binding to purified human UDG compared to human 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase. ATA did not bind uracil-containing DNA at these concentrations. Yet, combined crystal structure and in silico docking results unveil ATA interactions with the DNA binding channel and uracil-binding pocket in an open, destabilized UDG conformation. Biologically relevant ATA inhibition of UDG was measured in cell lysates from human DLD1 colon cancer cells and in MCF-7 breast cancer cells using a host cell reactivation assay. Collective findings provide proof-of-principle for development of an ATA-based chemotype and door stopper strategy targeting inhibitor binding to a destabilized, open pre-catalytic glycosylase conformation that prevents active site closing for functional DNA binding and nucleotide flipping needed to excise altered bases in DNA.
- Published
- 2021
4. Targeting SARS-CoV-2 Nsp3 macrodomain structure with insights from human poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase (PARG) structures with inhibitors.
- Author
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Brosey, Chris A, Brosey, Chris A, Houl, Jerry H, Katsonis, Panagiotis, Balapiti-Modarage, Lakshitha PF, Bommagani, Shobanbabu, Arvai, Andy, Moiani, Davide, Bacolla, Albino, Link, Todd, Warden, Leslie S, Lichtarge, Olivier, Jones, Darin E, Ahmed, Zamal, Tainer, John A, Brosey, Chris A, Brosey, Chris A, Houl, Jerry H, Katsonis, Panagiotis, Balapiti-Modarage, Lakshitha PF, Bommagani, Shobanbabu, Arvai, Andy, Moiani, Davide, Bacolla, Albino, Link, Todd, Warden, Leslie S, Lichtarge, Olivier, Jones, Darin E, Ahmed, Zamal, and Tainer, John A
- Abstract
Arrival of the novel SARS-CoV-2 has launched a worldwide effort to identify both pre-approved and novel therapeutics targeting the viral proteome, highlighting the urgent need for efficient drug discovery strategies. Even with effective vaccines, infection is possible, and at-risk populations would benefit from effective drug compounds that reduce the lethality and lasting damage of COVID-19 infection. The CoV-2 MacroD-like macrodomain (Mac1) is implicated in viral pathogenicity by disrupting host innate immunity through its mono (ADP-ribosyl) hydrolase activity, making it a prime target for antiviral therapy. We therefore solved the structure of CoV-2 Mac1 from non-structural protein 3 (Nsp3) and applied structural and sequence-based genetic tracing, including newly determined A. pompejana MacroD2 and GDAP2 amino acid sequences, to compare and contrast CoV-2 Mac1 with the functionally related human DNA-damage signaling factor poly (ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase (PARG). Previously, identified targetable features of the PARG active site allowed us to develop a pharmacologically useful PARG inhibitor (PARGi). Here, we developed a focused chemical library and determined 6 novel PARGi X-ray crystal structures for comparative analysis. We applied this knowledge to discovery of CoV-2 Mac1 inhibitors by combining computation and structural analysis to identify PARGi fragments with potential to bind the distal-ribose and adenosyl pockets of the CoV-2 Mac1 active site. Scaffold development of these PARGi fragments has yielded two novel compounds, PARG-345 and PARG-329, that crystallize within the Mac1 active site, providing critical structure-activity data and a pathway for inhibitor optimization. The reported structural findings demonstrate ways to harness our PARGi synthesis and characterization pipeline to develop CoV-2 Mac1 inhibitors targeting the ADP-ribose active site. Together, these structural and computational analyses reveal a path for accelerating development o
- Published
- 2021
5. An efficient chemical screening method for structure-based inhibitors to nucleic acid enzymes targeting the DNA repair-replication interface and SARS CoV-2.
- Author
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Moiani, Davide, Moiani, Davide, Link, Todd M, Brosey, Chris A, Katsonis, Panagiotis, Lichtarge, Olivier, Kim, Youngchang, Joachimiak, Andrzej, Ma, Zhijun, Kim, In-Kwon, Ahmed, Zamal, Jones, Darin E, Tsutakawa, Susan E, Tainer, John A, Moiani, Davide, Moiani, Davide, Link, Todd M, Brosey, Chris A, Katsonis, Panagiotis, Lichtarge, Olivier, Kim, Youngchang, Joachimiak, Andrzej, Ma, Zhijun, Kim, In-Kwon, Ahmed, Zamal, Jones, Darin E, Tsutakawa, Susan E, and Tainer, John A
- Abstract
We present a Chemistry and Structure Screen Integrated Efficiently (CASSIE) approach (named for Greek prophet Cassandra) to design inhibitors for cancer biology and pathogenesis. CASSIE provides an effective path to target master keys to control the repair-replication interface for cancer cells and SARS CoV-2 pathogenesis as exemplified here by specific targeting of Poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase (PARG) and ADP-ribose glycohydrolase ARH3 macrodomains plus SARS CoV-2 nonstructural protein 3 (Nsp3) Macrodomain 1 (Mac1) and Nsp15 nuclease. As opposed to the classical massive effort employing libraries with large numbers of compounds against single proteins, we make inhibitor design for multiple targets efficient. Our compact, chemically diverse, 5000 compound Goldilocks (GL) library has an intermediate number of compounds sized between fragments and drugs with predicted favorable ADME (absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion) and toxicological profiles. Amalgamating our core GL library with an approved drug (AD) library, we employ a combined GLAD library virtual screen, enabling an effective and efficient design cycle of ranked computer docking, top hit biophysical and cell validations, and defined bound structures using human proteins or their avatars. As new drug design is increasingly pathway directed as well as molecular and mechanism based, our CASSIE approach facilitates testing multiple related targets by efficiently turning a set of interacting drug discovery problems into a tractable medicinal chemistry engineering problem of optimizing affinity and ADME properties based upon early co-crystal structures. Optimization efforts are made efficient by a computationally-focused iterative chemistry and structure screen. Thus, we herein describe and apply CASSIE to define prototypic, specific inhibitors for PARG vs distinct inhibitors for the related macrodomains of ARH3 and SARS CoV-2 Nsp3 plus the SARS CoV-2 Nsp15 RNA nuclease.
- Published
- 2021
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