Emily R Derbyshire

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Name: Derbyshire, Emily R
Organization: Duke University , USA
Department:
Title: Assistant(PhD)

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Co-reporter:Juliane Totzke, Deepak Gurbani, Rene Raphemot, Philip F. Hughes, ... Emily R. Derbyshire
Cell Chemical Biology 2017 Volume 24, Issue 8(Volume 24, Issue 8) pp:
Publication Date(Web):17 August 2017
DOI:10.1016/j.chembiol.2017.07.011
•Identification of Takinib as a potent (IC50 9.5 nM) and selective TAK1 inhibitor•X-ray structure reveals binding of Takinib deep in the ATP-binding pocket of TAK1•Enzymatic studies demonstrate a substrate-like autophosphorylation mechanism•Takinib induces TNF-α -dependent cell death in rheumatoid arthritis and breast cancerTumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) has both positive and negative roles in human disease. In certain cancers, TNF-α is infused locally to promote tumor regression, but dose-limiting inflammatory effects limit broader utility. In autoimmune disease, anti-TNF-α antibodies control inflammation in most patients, but these benefits are offset during chronic treatment. TAK1 acts as a key mediator between survival and cell death in TNF-α-mediated signaling. Here, we describe Takinib, a potent and selective TAK1 inhibitor that induces apoptosis following TNF-α stimulation in cell models of rheumatoid arthritis and metastatic breast cancer. We demonstrate that Takinib is an inhibitor of autophosphorylated and non-phosphorylated TAK1 that binds within the ATP-binding pocket and inhibits by slowing down the rate-limiting step of TAK1 activation. Overall, Takinib is an attractive starting point for the development of inhibitors that sensitize cells to TNF-α-induced cell death, with general implications for cancer and autoimmune disease treatment.Download high-res image (208KB)Download full-size image
Co-reporter: Dr. Emily R. Derbyshire;Dr. Vanessa Zuzarte-Luís;Dr. Andreia D. Magalhães;Dr. Nobutaka Kato;Dr. Paul C. Sanschagrin;Dr. Jinhua Wang;Dr. Wenjun Zhou;Dr. Chrasekhar V. Miduturu; Dr. Ralph Mazitschek; Dr. Piotr Sliz; Dr. Maria M. Mota; Dr. Nathanael S. Gray; Dr. Jon Clardy
ChemBioChem 2014 Volume 15( Issue 13) pp:
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201490045
Co-reporter: Dr. Emily R. Derbyshire;Dr. Vanessa Zuzarte-Luís;Dr. Andreia D. Magalhães;Dr. Nobutaka Kato;Dr. Paul C. Sanschagrin;Dr. Jinhua Wang;Dr. Wenjun Zhou;Dr. Chrasekhar V. Miduturu; Dr. Ralph Mazitschek; Dr. Piotr Sliz; Dr. Maria M. Mota; Dr. Nathanael S. Gray; Dr. Jon Clardy
ChemBioChem 2014 Volume 15( Issue 13) pp:1920-1930
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201400025

Abstract

Malaria, an infectious disease caused by eukaryotic parasites of the genus Plasmodium, afflicts hundreds of millions of people every year. Both the parasite and its host utilize protein kinases to regulate essential cellular processes. Bioinformatic analyses of parasite genomes predict at least 65 protein kinases, but their biological functions and therapeutic potential are largely unknown. We profiled 1358 small-molecule kinase inhibitors to evaluate the role of both the human and the malaria kinomes in Plasmodium infection of liver cells, the parasites' obligatory but transient developmental stage that precedes the symptomatic blood stage. The screen identified several small molecules that inhibit parasite load in liver cells, some with nanomolar efficacy, and each compound was subsequently assessed for activity against blood-stage malaria. Most of the screening hits inhibited both liver- and blood-stage malaria parasites, which have dissimilar gene expression profiles and infect different host cells. Evaluation of existing kinase activity profiling data for the library members suggests that several kinases are essential to malaria parasites, including cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs), glycogen synthase kinases, and phosphoinositide-3-kinases. CDK inhibitors were found to bind to Plasmodium protein kinase 5, but it is likely that these compounds target multiple parasite kinases. The dual-stage inhibition of the identified kinase inhibitors makes them useful chemical probes and promising starting points for antimalarial development.

Kinase(phosphorylating), protein serine/threonine
L-lactate dehydrogenase from rabbit muscle ~140 U/mg
4-Pyrimidinecarboxylicacid, hexahydro-2,6-dioxo-
5-formyltetrahydrofolic acid