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Dive into the research topics where Alicia M. Hanson is active.

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Featured researches published by Alicia M. Hanson.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2012

Ivermectin is a potent inhibitor of flavivirus replication specifically targeting NS3 helicase activity: new prospects for an old drug

Eloise Mastrangelo; Margherita Pezzullo; Tine De Burghgraeve; Suzanne Kaptein; Boris Pastorino; Kai Dallmeier; Xavier de Lamballerie; Johan Neyts; Alicia M. Hanson; David N. Frick; Martino Bolognesi; Mario Milani

OBJECTIVES Infection with yellow fever virus (YFV), the prototypic mosquito-borne flavivirus, causes severe febrile disease with haemorrhage, multi-organ failure and a high mortality. Moreover, in recent years the Flavivirus genus has gained further attention due to re-emergence and increasing incidence of West Nile, dengue and Japanese encephalitis viruses. Potent and safe antivirals are urgently needed. METHODS Starting from the crystal structure of the NS3 helicase from Kunjin virus (an Australian variant of West Nile virus), we identified a novel, unexploited protein site that might be involved in the helicase catalytic cycle and could thus in principle be targeted for enzyme inhibition. In silico docking of a library of small molecules allowed us to identify a few selected compounds with high predicted affinity for the new site. Their activity against helicases from several flaviviruses was confirmed in in vitro helicase/enzymatic assays. The effect on the in vitro replication of flaviviruses was then evaluated. RESULTS Ivermectin, a broadly used anti-helminthic drug, proved to be a highly potent inhibitor of YFV replication (EC₅₀ values in the sub-nanomolar range). Moreover, ivermectin inhibited, although less efficiently, the replication of several other flaviviruses, i.e. dengue fever, Japanese encephalitis and tick-borne encephalitis viruses. Ivermectin exerts its effect at a timepoint that coincides with the onset of intracellular viral RNA synthesis, as expected for a molecule that specifically targets the viral helicase. CONCLUSIONS The well-tolerated drug ivermectin may hold great potential for treatment of YFV infections. Furthermore, structure-based optimization may result in analogues exerting potent activity against flaviviruses other than YFV.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Optimization of Potent Hepatitis C Virus NS3 Helicase Inhibitors Isolated from the Yellow Dyes Thioflavine S and Primuline

Kelin Li; Kevin J. Frankowski; Craig A. Belon; Ben Neuenswander; Jean Ndjomou; Alicia M. Hanson; Matthew A. Shanahan; Frank J. Schoenen; Brian S. J. Blagg; Jeffrey Aubé; David N. Frick

A screen for hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3 helicase inhibitors revealed that the commercial dye thioflavine S was the most potent inhibitor of NS3-catalyzed DNA and RNA unwinding in the 827-compound National Cancer Institute Mechanistic Set. Thioflavine S and the related dye primuline were separated here into their pure components, all of which were oligomers of substituted benzothiazoles. The most potent compound (P4), a benzothiazole tetramer, inhibited unwinding >50% at 2 ± 1 μM, inhibited the subgenomic HCV replicon at 10 μM, and was not toxic at 100 μM. Because P4 also interacted with DNA, more specific analogues were synthesized from the abundant dimeric component of primuline. Some of the 32 analogues prepared retained ability to inhibit HCV helicase but did not appear to interact with DNA. The most potent of these specific helicase inhibitors (compound 17) was active against the replicon and inhibited the helicase more than 50% at 2.6 ± 1 μM.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2013

Discovering New Medicines Targeting Helicases Challenges and Recent Progress

William R. Shadrick; Jean Ndjomou; Rajesh Kolli; Sourav Mukherjee; Alicia M. Hanson; David N. Frick

Helicases are ubiquitous motor proteins that separate and/or rearrange nucleic acid duplexes in reactions fueled by adenosine triphosphate (ATP) hydrolysis. Helicases encoded by bacteria, viruses, and human cells are widely studied targets for new antiviral, antibiotic, and anticancer drugs. This review summarizes the biochemistry of frequently targeted helicases. These proteins include viral enzymes from herpes simplex virus, papillomaviruses, polyomaviruses, coronaviruses, the hepatitis C virus, and various flaviviruses. Bacterial targets examined include DnaB-like and RecBCD-like helicases. The human DEAD-box protein DDX3 is the cellular antiviral target discussed, and cellular anticancer drug targets discussed are the human RecQ-like helicases and eIF4A. We also review assays used for helicase inhibitor discovery and the most promising and common helicase inhibitor chemotypes, such as nucleotide analogues, polyphenyls, metal ion chelators, flavones, polycyclic aromatic polymers, coumarins, and various DNA binding pharmacophores. Also discussed are common complications encountered while searching for potent helicase inhibitors and possible solutions for these problems.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Identification and analysis of hepatitis C virus NS3 helicase inhibitors using nucleic acid binding assays

Sourav Mukherjee; Alicia M. Hanson; William R. Shadrick; Jean Ndjomou; Noreena L. Sweeney; John J. Hernandez; Diana Bartczak; Kelin Li; Kevin J. Frankowski; Julie A. Heck; Leggy A. Arnold; Frank Schoenen; David N. Frick

Typical assays used to discover and analyze small molecules that inhibit the hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3 helicase yield few hits and are often confounded by compound interference. Oligonucleotide binding assays are examined here as an alternative. After comparing fluorescence polarization (FP), homogeneous time-resolved fluorescence (HTRF®; Cisbio) and AlphaScreen® (Perkin Elmer) assays, an FP-based assay was chosen to screen Sigma’s Library of Pharmacologically Active Compounds (LOPAC) for compounds that inhibit NS3-DNA complex formation. Four LOPAC compounds inhibited the FP-based assay: aurintricarboxylic acid (ATA) (IC50 = 1.4 μM), suramin sodium salt (IC50 = 3.6 μM), NF 023 hydrate (IC50 = 6.2 μM) and tyrphostin AG 538 (IC50 = 3.6 μM). All but AG 538 inhibited helicase-catalyzed strand separation, and all but NF 023 inhibited replication of subgenomic HCV replicons. A counterscreen using Escherichia coli single-stranded DNA binding protein (SSB) revealed that none of the new HCV helicase inhibitors were specific for NS3h. However, when the SSB-based assay was used to analyze derivatives of another non-specific helicase inhibitor, the main component of the dye primuline, it revealed that some primuline derivatives (e.g. PubChem CID50930730) are up to 30-fold more specific for HCV NS3h than similarly potent HCV helicase inhibitors.


Methods in Enzymology | 2012

Identification and Analysis of Inhibitors Targeting the Hepatitis C Virus NS3 Helicase

Alicia M. Hanson; John J. Hernandez; William R. Shadrick; David N. Frick

This chapter describes two types of FRET-based fluorescence assays that can be used to identify and analyze compounds that inhibit the helicase encoded by the hepatitis C virus (HCV). Both assays use a fluorescently labeled DNA or RNA oligonucleotide to monitor helicase-catalyzed strand separation, and they differ from other real-time helicase assays in that they do not require the presence of other nucleic acids to trap the reaction products. The first assay is a molecular beacon-based helicase assay (MBHA) that monitors helicase-catalyzed displacement of a hairpin-forming oligonucleotide with a fluorescent moiety on one end and a quencher on the other. DNA-based MBHAs have been used extensively for high-throughput screening (HTS), but RNA-based MBHAs are typically less useful because of poor signal to background ratios. In the second assay discussed, the fluorophore and quencher are split between two hairpin-forming oligonucleotides annealed in tandem to a third oligonucleotide. This split beacon helicase assay can be used for HTS with either DNA or RNA oligonucleotides. These assays should be useful to the many labs searching for HCV helicase inhibitors in order to develop new HCV therapies that are still desperately needed.


Biochemistry | 2013

Aurintricarboxylic acid modulates the affinity of hepatitis C virus NS3 helicase for both nucleic acid and ATP.

William R. Shadrick; Sourav Mukherjee; Alicia M. Hanson; Noreena L. Sweeney; David N. Frick

Aurintricarboxylic acid (ATA) is a potent inhibitor of many enzymes needed for cell and virus replication, such as polymerases, helicases, nucleases, and topoisomerases. This study examines how ATA interacts with the helicase encoded by the hepatitis C virus (HCV) and reveals that ATA interferes with both nucleic acid and ATP binding to the enzyme. We show that ATA directly binds HCV helicase to prevent the enzyme from interacting with nucleic acids and to modulate the affinity of HCV helicase for ATP, the fuel for helicase action. Amino acid substitutions in the helicase DNA binding cleft or its ATP binding site alter the ability of ATA to disrupt helicase-DNA interactions. These data, along with molecular modeling results, support the notion that an ATA polymer binds between Arg467 and Glu493 to prevent the helicase from binding either ATP or nucleic acids. We also characterize how ATA affects the kinetics of helicase-catalyzed ATP hydrolysis, and thermodynamic parameters describing the direct interaction between HCV helicase and ATA using microcalorimetry. The thermodynamics of ATA binding to HCV helicase reveal that ATA binding does not mimic nucleic acid binding in that ATA binding is driven by a smaller enthalpy change and an increase in entropy.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2014

Ebselen Inhibits Hepatitis C Virus NS3 Helicase Binding to Nucleic Acid and Prevents Viral Replication

Sourav Mukherjee; Warren S. Weiner; Chad E. Schroeder; Denise S. Simpson; Alicia M. Hanson; Noreena L. Sweeney; Rachel K. Marvin; Jean Ndjomou; Rajesh Kolli; Dragan Isailovic; Frank J. Schoenen; David N. Frick

The hepatitis C virus (HCV) nonstructural protein 3 (NS3) is both a protease, which cleaves viral and host proteins, and a helicase that separates nucleic acid strands, using ATP hydrolysis to fuel the reaction. Many antiviral drugs, and compounds in clinical trials, target the NS3 protease, but few helicase inhibitors that function as antivirals have been reported. This study focuses on the analysis of the mechanism by which ebselen (2-phenyl-1,2-benzisoselenazol-3-one), a compound previously shown to be a HCV antiviral agent, inhibits the NS3 helicase. Ebselen inhibited the abilities of NS3 to unwind nucleic acids, to bind nucleic acids, and to hydrolyze ATP, and about 1 μM ebselen was sufficient to inhibit each of these activities by 50%. However, ebselen had no effect on the activity of the NS3 protease, even at 100 times higher ebselen concentrations. At concentrations below 10 μM, the ability of ebselen to inhibit HCV helicase was reversible, but prolonged incubation of HCV helicase with higher ebselen concentrations led to irreversible inhibition and the formation of covalent adducts between ebselen and all 14 cysteines present in HCV helicase. Ebselen analogues with sulfur replacing the selenium were just as potent HCV helicase inhibitors as ebselen, but the length of the linker between the phenyl and benzisoselenazol rings was critical. Modifications of the phenyl ring also affected compound potency over 30-fold, and ebselen was a far more potent helicase inhibitor than other, structurally unrelated, thiol-modifying agents. Ebselen analogues were also more effective antiviral agents, and they were less toxic to hepatocytes than ebselen. Although the above structure–activity relationship studies suggest that ebselen targets a specific site on NS3, we were unable to confirm binding to either the NS3 ATP binding site or nucleic acid binding cleft by examining the effects of ebselen on NS3 proteins lacking key cysteines.


Protein Science | 2013

The interdomain interface in bifunctional enzyme protein 3/4A (NS3/4A) regulates protease and helicase activities

Cihan Aydin; Sourav Mukherjee; Alicia M. Hanson; David N. Frick; Celia A. Schiffer

Hepatitis C (HCV) protein 3/4A (NS3/4A) is a bifunctional enzyme comprising two separate domains with protease and helicase activities, which are essential for viral propagation. Both domains are stable and have enzymatic activity separately, and the relevance and implications of having protease and helicase together as a single protein remains to be explored. Altered in vitro activities of isolated domains compared with the full‐length NS3/4A protein suggest the existence of interdomain communication. The molecular mechanism and extent of this communication was investigated by probing the domain–domain interface observed in HCV NS3/4A crystal structures. We found in molecular dynamics simulations that the two domains of NS3/4A are dynamically coupled through the interface. Interestingly, mutations designed to disrupt this interface did not hinder the catalytic activities of either domain. In contrast, substrate cleavage and DNA unwinding by these mutants were mostly enhanced compared with the wild‐type protein. Disrupting the interface did not significantly alter RNA unwinding activity; however, the full‐length protein was more efficient in RNA unwinding than the isolated protease domain, suggesting a more direct role in RNA processing independent of the interface. Our findings suggest that HCV NS3/4A adopts an “extended” catalytically active conformation, and interface formation acts as a switch to regulate activity. We propose a unifying model connecting HCV NS3/4A conformational states and protease and helicase function, where interface formation and the dynamic interplay between the two enzymatic domains of HCV NS3/4A potentially modulate the protease and helicase activities in vivo.


Antiviral Research | 2012

Fluorescent primuline derivatives inhibit hepatitis C virus NS3-catalyzed RNA unwinding, peptide hydrolysis and viral replicase formation.

Jean Ndjomou; Rajesh Kolli; Sourav Mukherjee; William R. Shadrick; Alicia M. Hanson; Noreena L. Sweeney; Diana Bartczak; Kelin Li; Kevin J. Frankowski; Frank J. Schoenen; David N. Frick

The hepatitis C virus (HCV) multifunctional nonstructural protein 3 (NS3) is a protease that cleaves viral and host proteins and a helicase that separates DNA and RNA structures in reactions fueled by ATP hydrolysis. Li et al. (2012) recently synthesized a series of new NS3 helicase inhibitors from the benzothiazole dimer component of the fluorescent yellow dye primuline. This study further characterizes a subset of these primuline derivatives with respect to their specificity, mechanism of action, and effect on cells harboring HCV subgenomic replicons. All compounds inhibited DNA and RNA unwinding catalyzed by NS3 from different HCV genotypes, but only some inhibited the NS3 protease function, and few had any effect on HCV NS3 catalyzed ATP hydrolysis. A different subset contained potent inhibitors of RNA stimulated ATP hydrolysis catalyzed by the related NS3 protein from Dengue virus. In assays monitoring intrinsic protein fluorescence in the absence of nucleic acids, the compounds cooperatively bound NS3 with K(d)s that reflect their potency in assays. The fluorescent properties of the primuline derivatives both in vitro and in cells are also described. The primuline derivative that was the most active against subgenomic replicons in cells caused a 14-fold drop in HCV RNA levels (IC(50)=5±2μM). In cells, the most effective primuline derivative did not inhibit the cellular activity of NS3 protease but disrupted HCV replicase structures.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2015

Simultaneously Targeting the NS3 Protease and Helicase Activities for More Effective Hepatitis C Virus Therapy

Jean Ndjomou; M. Josie Corby; Noreena L. Sweeney; Alicia M. Hanson; Cihan Aydin; Akbar Ali; Celia A. Schiffer; Kelin Li; Kevin J. Frankowski; Frank J. Schoenen; David N. Frick

This study examines the specificity and mechanism of action of a recently reported hepatitis C virus (HCV) nonstructural protein 3 (NS3) helicase-protease inhibitor (HPI), and the interaction of HPI with the NS3 protease inhibitors telaprevir, boceprevir, danoprevir, and grazoprevir. HPI most effectively reduced cellular levels of subgenomic genotype 4a replicons, followed by genotypes 3a and 1b replicons. HPI had no effect on HCV genotype 2a or dengue virus replicon levels. Resistance evolved more slowly to HPI than telaprevir, and HPI inhibited telaprevir-resistant replicons. Molecular modeling and analysis of the ability of HPI to inhibit peptide hydrolysis catalyzed by a variety of wildtype and mutant NS3 proteins suggested that HPI forms a bridge between the NS3 RNA-binding cleft and an allosteric site previously shown to bind other protease inhibitors. In most combinations, the antiviral effect of HPI was additive with telaprevir and boceprevir, minor synergy was observed with danoprevir, and modest synergy was observed with grazoprevir.

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Sourav Mukherjee

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Jean Ndjomou

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Noreena L. Sweeney

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Kelin Li

University of Kansas

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William R. Shadrick

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Rajesh Kolli

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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