Adrian Whitty
Boston University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Adrian Whitty.
Nature Reviews Drug Discovery | 2011
Juswinder Singh; Russell C. Petter; Thomas A. Baillie; Adrian Whitty
Covalent drugs haveproved to be successful therapies for various indications, but largely owing to safety concerns, they are rarely considered when initiating a target-directed drug discovery project. There is a need to reassess this important class of drugs, and to reconcile the discordance between the historic success of covalent drugs and the reluctance of most drug discovery teams to include them in their armamentarium. This Review surveys the prevalence and pharmacological advantages of covalent drugs, discusses how potential risks and challenges may be addressed through innovative design, and presents the broad opportunities provided by targeted covalent inhibitors.
Science | 2005
Molly M. He; Annemarie Stroustrup Smith; Johan D. Oslob; William Michael Flanagan; Andrew C. Braisted; Adrian Whitty; Mark T. Cancilla; Jun Wang; Alexey A. Lugovskoy; Josh C. Yoburn; Amy D. Fung; Graham K. Farrington; John K. Eldredge; Eric S. Day; Leslie A. Cruz; Teresa G. Cachero; Stephan K. Miller; Jessica E. Friedman; Ingrid C. Choong; Brian C. Cunningham
We have identified a small-molecule inhibitor of tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) that promotes subunit disassembly of this trimeric cytokine family member. The compound inhibits TNF-α activity in biochemical and cell-based assays with median inhibitory concentrations of 22 and 4.6 micromolar, respectively. Formation of an intermediate complex between the compound and the intact trimer results in a 600-fold accelerated subunit dissociation rate that leads to trimer dissociation. A structure solved by x-ray crystallography reveals that a single compound molecule displaces a subunit of the trimer to form a complex with a dimer of TNF-α subunits.
Nature Immunology | 2001
Shannon K. Bromley; Andrea Iaboni; Simon J. Davis; Adrian Whitty; Jonathan M. Green; Andrey S. Shaw; Arthur Weiss; Michael L. Dustin
According to the two-signal model of T cell activation, costimulatory molecules augment T cell receptor (TCR) signaling, whereas adhesion molecules enhance TCR–MHC-peptide recognition. The structure and binding properties of CD28 imply that it may perform both functions, blurring the distinction between adhesion and costimulatory molecules. Our results show that CD28 on naïve T cells does not support adhesion and has little or no capacity for directly enhancing TCR–MHC-peptide interactions. Instead of being dependent on costimulatory signaling, we propose that a key function of the immunological synapse is to generate a cellular microenvironment that favors the interactions of potent secondary signaling molecules, such as CD28.
Pharmaceutical Research | 1998
Laura Runkel; Werner Meier; R. Blake Pepinsky; Michael Karpusas; Adrian Whitty; Kathleen Kimball; Margot Brickelmaier; Celine Muldowney; Wendy Jones; Susan Goelz
AbstractPurpose. Two recombinant IFN-β products have been approved for the treatment of multiple sclerosis, a glycosylated form with the predicted natural amino acid sequence (IFN-β-la) and a non-glycosylated form that has a Met-1 deletion and a Cys-17 to Ser mutation (IFN-β-lb). The structural basis for activity differences between IFN-β-la and IFN-β-lb, is determined. Methods. In vitro antiviral, antiproliferative and immunomodulatory assays were used to directly compare the two IFN-β products. Size exclusion chromatography (SEC), SDS-PAGE, thermal denaturation, and X-ray crystallography were used to examine structural differences. Results. IFN-β- la was 10 times more active than IFN-β- Ib with specific activities in a standard antiviral assay of 20 × 107 lU/mg for IFN-β-la and 2 × 107 lU/mg for IFN-β-lb. Of the known structural differences between IFN-β-la and IFN-β-lb, only glycosylation affected in vitro activity. Deglycosylation of IFN-β-la produced a decrease in total activity that was primarily caused by the formation of an insoluble disulfide-linked IFN precipitate. Deglycosylation also resulted in an increased sensitivity to thermal denaturation. SEC data for IFN-β-lb revealed large, soluble aggregates that had reduced antiviral activity (approximated at 0.7 × 107 lU/mg). Crystallographic data for IFN-β-la revealed that the glycan formed H-bonds with the peptide backbone and shielded an uncharged surface from solvent exposure. Conclusions. Together these results suggest that the greater biological activity of IFN-β-la is due to a stabilizing effect of the carbohydrate on structure.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003
Richa Rawat; Adrian Whitty; Peter J. Tonge
Isoniazid (INH), a frontline antitubercular drug, inhibits InhA, the enoyl reductase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, by forming a covalent adduct with the NAD cofactor. Here, we report that the INH-NAD adduct is a slow, tight-binding competitive inhibitor of InhA. Demonstration that the adduct binds to WT InhA by a two-step enzyme inhibition mechanism, with initial, weak binding (K–1 = 16 ± 11 nM) followed by slow conversion to a final inhibited complex (EI*) with overall Ki = 0.75 ± 0.08 nM, reconciles existing contradictory values for the inhibitory potency of INH-NAD for InhA. The first order rate constant for conversion of the initial EI complex to EI* (k2 = 0.13 ± 0.01 min–1) is similar to the maximum rate constant observed for InhA inhibition in reaction mixtures containing InhA, INH, NADH, and the INH-activating enzyme KatG (catalase/peroxidase from M. tuberculosis), consistent with an inhibition mechanism in which the adduct forms in solution rather than on the enzyme. Importantly, three mutations that correlate with INH resistance, I21V, I47T, and S94A, have little impact on the inhibition constants. Thus, drug resistance does not result simply from a reduction in affinity of INH-NAD for pure InhA. Instead, we hypothesize that protein–protein interactions within the FASII complex are critical to the mechanism of INH action. Finally, for M161V, an InhA mutation that correlates with resistance to the common biocide triclosan in Mycobacterium smegmatis, binding to form the initial EI complex is significantly weakened, explaining why this mutant inactivates more slowly than WT InhA when incubated with INH, NADH, and KatG.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2008
Adrian Whitty
Cooperative binding effects pervade biology. Only a few basic principles are at play, but in different biological contexts cooperativity appears in distinct guises to achieve different ends. Here I discuss some of the manifestations of cooperativity that are most important in biology and drug discovery as they pertain to systems at different levels of complexity and also highlight aspects of this broadly important phenomenon that remain poorly understood.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011
Dima Kozakov; David R. Hall; Gwo-Yu Chuang; Regina Cencic; Ryan Brenke; Laurie E. Grove; Dmitri Beglov; Jerry Pelletier; Adrian Whitty; Sandor Vajda
Despite the growing number of examples of small-molecule inhibitors that disrupt protein–protein interactions (PPIs), the origin of druggability of such targets is poorly understood. To identify druggable sites in protein–protein interfaces we combine computational solvent mapping, which explores the protein surface using a variety of small “probe” molecules, with a conformer generator to account for side-chain flexibility. Applications to unliganded structures of 15 PPI target proteins show that the druggable sites comprise a cluster of binding hot spots, distinguishable from other regions of the protein due to their concave topology combined with a pattern of hydrophobic and polar functionality. This combination of properties confers on the hot spots a tendency to bind organic species possessing some polar groups decorating largely hydrophobic scaffolds. Thus, druggable sites at PPI are not simply sites that are complementary to particular organic functionality, but rather possess a general tendency to bind organic compounds with a variety of structures, including key side chains of the partner protein. Results also highlight the importance of conformational adaptivity at the binding site to allow the hot spots to expand to accommodate a ligand of drug-like dimensions. The critical components of this adaptivity are largely local, involving primarily low energy side-chain motions within 6 Å of a hot spot. The structural and physicochemical signature of druggable sites at PPI interfaces is sufficiently robust to be detectable from the structure of the unliganded protein, even when substantial conformational adaptation is required for optimal ligand binding.
Current Opinion in Chemical Biology | 2009
Michelle R. Arkin; Adrian Whitty
The biological functions of intracellular signaling enzymes typically depend on multiple protein-protein interactions (PPI) with substrates, scaffolding proteins, and other cytoplasmic molecules. Blocking these interactions provides an alternative means to modulate signaling activity without fully ablating the catalytic activity of the target. Several recent reports describe small-molecule antagonists that target PPI sites on signaling enzymes. These findings suggest that such sites may often be druggable. However, the hypothesis that targeting such sites might confer on the resulting inhibitors improved properties of efficacy and/or tolerability, while appealing, remains largely untested.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2014
Elizabeth A. Villar; Dmitri Beglov; Spandan Chennamadhavuni; John A. Porco; Dima Kozakov; Sandor Vajda; Adrian Whitty
The potential utility of synthetic macrocycles as drugs, particularly against low druggability targets such as protein-protein interactions, has been widely discussed. There is little information, however, to guide the design of macrocycles for good target protein-binding activity or bioavailability. To address this knowledge gap we analyze the binding modes of a representative set of macrocycle-protein complexes. The results, combined with consideration of the physicochemical properties of approved macrocyclic drugs, allow us to propose specific guidelines for the design of synthetic macrocycles libraries possessing structural and physicochemical features likely to favor strong binding to protein targets and also good bioavailability. We additionally provide evidence that large, natural product derived macrocycles can bind to targets that are not druggable by conventional, drug-like compounds, supporting the notion that natural product inspired synthetic macrocycles can expand the number of proteins that are druggable by synthetic small molecules.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003
Marc Pelletier; Jeffrey Thompson; Fang Qian; Sarah A. Bixler; Dahai Gong; Teresa G. Cachero; Kevin Gilbride; Eric S. Day; Mohammad Zafari; Christopher D. Benjamin; Leonid Gorelik; Adrian Whitty; Susan L. Kalled; Christine Ambrose; Yen-Ming Hsu
BAFF is considered a therapeutic target because dysregulated production of BAFF can induce systemic lupus erythematosus-like phenotype in mice, and elevated levels of BAFF are associated with disease severity in systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis patients. Fc fusion decoy receptors, BCMA-Fc and BAFF-R-Fc, are therapeutic candidates for blocking BAFF. While studying their interactions with BAFF, we found that BAFF-R-Fc is more effective than BCMA-Fc for blocking BAFF binding to its receptors. We also found that a trimeric BAFF can bind more than one BAFF-R-Fc but only one BCMA-Fc. Moreover, we show that, in contrast to monovalent BAFF-R-Fc, monovalent BCMA does not form stable complexes with BAFF. Differences in their interaction with BAFF predict BAFF-R-Fc would be a better inhibitor. Indeed, we show BAFF-R-Fc is 10-fold more efficacious than BCMA-Fc for blocking BAFF-induced B cell proliferation in vitro and for blocking BAFF-mediated survival of mouse splenic B lymphocytes in vivo.