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Dive into the research topics where Alexey A. Lugovskoy is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexey A. Lugovskoy.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2008

Identification of RIP1 kinase as a specific cellular target of necrostatins.

Alexei Degterev; Junichi Hitomi; Megan Germscheid; Irene L. Ch'en; Olga Korkina; Xin Teng; Gregory D. Cuny; Chengye Yuan; Gerhard Wagner; Stephen M. Hedrick; Scott A. Gerber; Alexey A. Lugovskoy; Junying Yuan

Necroptosis is a cellular mechanism of necrotic cell death induced by apoptotic stimuli in the form of death domain receptor engagement by their respective ligands under conditions where apoptotic execution is prevented. Although it occurs under regulated conditions, necroptotic cell death is characterized by the same morphological features as unregulated necrotic death. Here we report that necrostatin-1, a previously identified small-molecule inhibitor of necroptosis, is a selective allosteric inhibitor of the death domain receptor-associated adaptor kinase RIP1 in vitro. We show that RIP1 is the primary cellular target responsible for the antinecroptosis activity of necrostatin-1. In addition, we show that two other necrostatins, necrostatin-3 and necrostatin-5, also target the RIP1 kinase step in the necroptosis pathway, but through mechanisms distinct from that of necrostatin-1. Overall, our data establish necrostatins as the first-in-class inhibitors of RIP1 kinase, the key upstream kinase involved in the activation of necroptosis.


Nature Cell Biology | 2001

Identification of small-molecule inhibitors of interaction between the BH3 domain and Bcl-xL

Alexei Degterev; Alexey A. Lugovskoy; Michael H. Cardone; Bradley Mulley; Gerhard Wagner; Timothy J. Mitchison; Junying Yuan

To study the role of the BH3 domain in mediating pro-apoptotic and anti-apoptotic activities of Bcl-2 family members, we identified a series of novel small molecules (BH3Is) that inhibit the binding of the Bak BH3 peptide to Bcl-xL. NMR analyses revealed that BH3Is target the BH3-binding pocket of Bcl-xL. Inhibitors specifically block the BH3-domain-mediated heterodimerization between Bcl-2 family members in vitro and in vivo and induce apoptosis. Our results indicate that BH3-dependent heterodimerization is the key function of anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 family members and is required for the maintenance of cellular homeostasis.


Cell | 2003

The PHD Finger of the Chromatin-Associated Protein ING2 Functions as a Nuclear Phosphoinositide Receptor

Or Gozani; Philip Karuman; David R. Jones; Dmitri Ivanov; James Cha; Alexey A. Lugovskoy; Cheryl L. Baird; Hong Zhu; Seth J. Field; Stephen L. Lessnick; Jennifer Villasenor; Bharat Mehrotra; Jian Chen; Vikram R. Rao; Joan S. Brugge; Colin G. Ferguson; Bernard Payrastre; David G. Myszka; Lewis C. Cantley; Gerhard Wagner; Nullin Divecha; Glenn D. Prestwich; Junying Yuan

Phosphoinositides (PtdInsPs) play critical roles in cytoplasmic signal transduction pathways. However, their functions in the nucleus are unclear, as specific nuclear receptors for PtdInsPs have not been identified. Here, we show that ING2, a candidate tumor suppressor protein, is a nuclear PtdInsP receptor. ING2 contains a plant homeodomain (PHD) finger, a motif common to many chromatin-regulatory proteins. We find that the PHD fingers of ING2 and other diverse nuclear proteins bind in vitro to PtdInsPs, including the rare PtdInsP species, phosphatidylinositol 5-phosphate (PtdIns(5)P). Further, we demonstrate that the ING2 PHD finger interacts with PtdIns(5)P in vivo and provide evidence that this interaction regulates the ability of ING2 to activate p53 and p53-dependent apoptotic pathways. Together, our data identify the PHD finger as a phosphoinositide binding module and a nuclear PtdInsP receptor, and suggest that PHD-phosphoinositide interactions directly regulate nuclear responses to DNA damage.


Science | 2005

Small-Molecule Inhibition of TNF-α

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.


Cell | 2003

Ribosome loading onto the mRNA cap is driven by conformational coupling between eIF4G and eIF4E.

John D. Gross; Nathan J. Moerke; Tobias von der Haar; Alexey A. Lugovskoy; Alan B. Sachs; John E. G. McCarthy; Gerhard Wagner

The eukaryotic initiation factor 4G (eIF4G) is the core of a multicomponent switch controlling gene expression at the level of translation initiation. It interacts with the small ribosomal subunit interacting protein, eIF3, and the eIF4E/cap-mRNA complex in order to load the ribosome onto mRNA during cap-dependent translation. We describe the solution structure of the complex between yeast eIF4E/cap and eIF4G (393-490). Binding triggers a coupled folding transition of eIF4G (393-490) and the eIF4E N terminus resulting in a molecular bracelet whereby eIF4G (393-490) forms a right-handed helical ring that wraps around the N terminus of eIF4E. Cofolding allosterically enhances association of eIF4E with the cap and is required for maintenance of optimal growth and polysome distributions in vivo. Our data explain how mRNA, eIF4E, and eIF4G exists as a stable mRNP that may facilitate multiple rounds of ribosomal loading during translation initiation, a key determinant in the overall rate of protein synthesis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Proteome-wide Analysis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Identifies Several PHD Fingers as Novel Direct and Selective Binding Modules of Histone H3 Methylated at Either Lysine 4 or Lysine 36

Xiaobing Shi; Ioulia Kachirskaia; Kay L. Walter; Jen Hao A. Kuo; Aimee Lake; Foteini Davrazou; Steve M. Chan; David G.E. Martin; Ian M. Fingerman; Scott D. Briggs; LeAnn Howe; Paul J. Utz; Tatiana G. Kutateladze; Alexey A. Lugovskoy; Mark T. Bedford; Or Gozani

The PHD finger motif is a signature chromatin-associated motif that is found throughout eukaryotic proteomes. Here we have determined the histone methyl-lysine binding activity of the PHD fingers present within the Saccharomyces cerevisiae proteome. We provide evidence on the genomic scale that PHD fingers constitute a general class of effector modules for histone H3 trimethylated at lysine 4 (H3K4me3) and histone H3 trimethylated at lysine 36 (H3K36me3). Structural modeling of PHD fingers demonstrates a conserved mechanism for recognizing the trimethyl moiety and provides insight into the molecular basis of affinity for the different methyl-histone ligands. Together, our study suggests that a common function for PHD fingers is to transduce methyl-lysine events and sheds light on how a single histone modification can be linked to multiple biological outcomes.


Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 2001

A solubility-enhancement tag (SET) for NMR studies of poorly behaving proteins

Pei Zhou; Alexey A. Lugovskoy; Gerhard Wagner

Protein-fusion constructs have been used with great success for enhancing expression of soluble recombinant protein and as tags for affinity purification. Unfortunately the most popular tags, such as GST and MBP, are large, which hinders direct NMR studies of the fusion proteins. Cleavage of the fusion proteins often re-introduces problems with solubility and stability. Here we describe the use of N-terminally fused protein G (B1 domain) as a non-cleavable solubility-enhancement tag (SET) for structure determination of a dimeric protein complex. The SET enhances the solubility and stability of the fusion product dramatically while not interacting directly with the protein of interest. This approach can be used for structural characterization of poorly behaving protein systems, and would be especially useful for structural genomics studies.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Identification of a New Murine Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor Locus That Contains Two Novel Murine Receptors for Tumor Necrosis Factor-related Apoptosis-inducing Ligand (TRAIL)

Pascal Schneider; Dian Olson; Aubry Tardivel; Beth Browning; Alexey A. Lugovskoy; DaHai Gong; Max Dobles; Sylvie Hertig; Kay Hofmann; Herman Van Vlijmen; Yen-Ming Hsu; Linda C. Burkly; Jürg Tschopp; Timothy S. Zheng

Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) ligand and receptor superfamily members play critical roles in diverse developmental and pathological settings. In search for novel TNF superfamily members, we identified a murine chromosomal locus that contains three new TNF receptor-related genes. Sequence alignments suggest that the ligand binding regions of these murine TNF receptor homologues, mTNFRH1, -2 and -3, are most homologous to those of the tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) receptors. By using a number of in vitro ligand-receptor binding assays, we demonstrate that mTNFRH1 and -2, but not mTNFRH3, bind murine TRAIL, suggesting that they are indeed TRAIL receptors. This notion is further supported by our demonstration that both mTNFRH1:Fc and mTNFRH2:Fc fusion proteins inhibited mTRAIL-induced apoptosis of Jurkat cells. Unlike the only other known murine TRAIL receptor mTRAILR2, however, neither mTNFRH2 nor mTNFRH3 has a cytoplasmic region containing the well characterized death domain motif. Coupled with our observation that overexpression of mTNFRH1 and -2 in 293T cells neither induces apoptosis nor triggers NFκB activation, we propose that themTnfrh1 and mTnfrh2 genes encode the first described murine decoy receptors for TRAIL, and we renamed themmDcTrailr1 and -r2, respectively. Interestingly, the overall sequence structures of mDcTRAILR1 and -R2 are quite distinct from those of the known human decoy TRAIL receptors, suggesting that the presence of TRAIL decoy receptors represents a more recent evolutionary event.


Cell | 1999

Solution structure of the CIDE-N domain of CIDE-B and a model for CIDE-N/CIDE-N interactions in the DNA fragmentation pathway of apoptosis.

Alexey A. Lugovskoy; Pei Zhou; James J. Chou; John S. McCarty; Peng Li; Gerhard Wagner

Apoptotic DNA fragmentation and chromatin condensation are mediated by the caspase-activated DFF40/ CAD nuclease, which is chaperoned and inhibited by DFF45/ICAD. CIDE proteins share a homologous regulatory CIDE-N domain with DFF40/CAD and DFF45/ ICAD. Here we report the solution structure of CIDE-N of human CIDE-B. We show that the CIDE-N of CIDE-B interacts with CIDE-N domains of both DFF40 and DFF45. The binding epitopes are similar and map to a highly charged bipolar surface region of CIDE-B. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the CIDE-N of CIDE-B regulates enzymatic activity of the DFF40/ DFF45 complex in vitro. Based on these results and mutagenesis data, we propose a model for the CIDE-N/ CIDE-N complex and discuss the role of this novel bipolar interaction in mediating downstream events of apoptosis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Small molecule inhibition of phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-triphosphate (PIP3) binding to pleckstrin homology domains

Benchun Miao; Igor Skidan; Jinsheng Yang; Alexey A. Lugovskoy; Mikhail Reibarkh; Kai Long; Tres Brazell; Kulbhushan A. Durugkar; Jenny L. Maki; C. V. Ramana; Brian Schaffhausen; Gerhard Wagner; Vladimir P. Torchilin; Junying Yuan; Alexei Degterev

The PI3-kinase (PI3K) pathway regulates many cellular processes, especially cell metabolism, cell survival, and apoptosis. Phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-trisphosphate (PIP3), the product of PI3K activity and a key signaling molecule, acts by recruiting pleckstrin-homology (PH) domain-containing proteins to cell membranes. Here, we describe a new structural class of nonphosphoinositide small molecule antagonists (PITenins, PITs) of PIP3–PH domain interactions (IC50 ranges from 13.4 to 31 μM in PIP3/Akt PH domain binding assay). PITs inhibit interactions of a number of PIP3-binding PH domains, including those of Akt and PDK1, without affecting several PIP2-selective PH domains. As a result, PITs suppress the PI3K-PDK1-Akt pathway and trigger metabolic stress and apoptosis. A PIT-1 analog displayed significant antitumor activity in vivo, including inhibition of tumor growth and induction of apoptosis. Overall, our studies demonstrate the feasibility of developing specific small molecule antagonists of PIP3 signaling.

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Ellen Garber

Northwestern University

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Pei Zhou

Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics

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