Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Andrea Unzue is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Andrea Unzue.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Discovery of CREBBP Bromodomain Inhibitors by High-Throughput Docking and Hit Optimization Guided by Molecular Dynamics.

Min Xu; Andrea Unzue; Jing Dong; Dimitrios Spiliotopoulos; Cristina Nevado; Amedeo Caflisch

We have identified two chemotypes of CREBBP bromodomain ligands by fragment-based high-throughput docking. Only 17 molecules from the original library of two-million compounds were tested in vitro. Optimization of the two low-micromolar hits, the 4-acylpyrrole 1 and acylbenzene 9, was driven by molecular dynamics results which suggested improvement of the polar interactions with the Arg1173 side chain at the rim of the binding site. The synthesis of only two derivatives of 1 yielded the 4-acylpyrrole 6 which shows a single-digit micromolar affinity for the CREBBP bromodomain and a ligand efficiency of 0.34 kcal/mol per non-hydrogen atom. Optimization of the acylbenzene hit 9 resulted in a series of derivatives with nanomolar potencies, good ligand efficiency and selectivity (see Unzue, A.; Xu, M.; Dong, J.; Wiedmer, L.; Spiliotopoulos, D.; Caflisch, A.; Nevado, C.Fragment-Based Design of Selective Nanomolar Ligands of the CREBBP Bromodomain. J. Med. Chem. 2015, DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5b00172). The in silico predicted binding mode of the acylbenzene derivative 10 was validated by solving the structure of the complex with the CREBBP bromodomain.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Fragment-Based Design of Selective Nanomolar Ligands of the CREBBP Bromodomain

Andrea Unzue; Min Xu; Jing Dong; Lars Wiedmer; Dimitrios Spiliotopoulos; Amedeo Caflisch; Cristina Nevado

Novel ligands of the CREBBP bromodomain were identified by fragment-based docking. The in silico discovered hits have been optimized by chemical synthesis into selective nanomolar compounds, thereby preserving the ligand efficiency. The selectivity for the CREBBP bromodomain over other human bromodomain subfamilies has achieved by a benzoate moiety which was predicted by docking to be involved in favorable electrostatic interactions with the Arg1173 side chain, a prediction that could be verified a posteriori by the high-resolution crystal structure of the CREBBP bromodomain in complex with ligand 6 and also by MD simulations (see Xu, M.; Unzue, A.; Dong, J.; Spiliotopoulos, D.; Nevado, C.; Caflisch, A. Discovery of CREBBP bromodomain inhibitors by high-throughput docking and hit optimization guided by molecular dynamics. J. Med. Chem. 2015, DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5b00171).


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

The “Gatekeeper” Residue Influences the Mode of Binding of Acetyl Indoles to Bromodomains

Andrea Unzue; Hongtao Zhao; Graziano Lolli; Jing Dong; Jian Zhu; Melanie Zechner; Aymeric Dolbois; Amedeo Caflisch; Cristina Nevado

Small-molecule hits for the bromodomains of CREBBP and BAZ2B have been identified by scaffold hopping followed by docking of a set of ∼200 compounds containing the acetyl indole scaffold. Chemical synthesis of nearly 30 derivatives has resulted in ligands of representatives of three subfamilies of human bromodomains with favorable ligand efficiency. The X-ray crystal structures of three different bromodomains (CREBBP, BAZ2B, and BRPF1b) in complex with acetyl indole derivatives reveal the influence of the gatekeeper residue on the orientation of small-molecule ligands in the acetyl lysine binding site.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Pyrrolo[3,2-b]quinoxaline Derivatives as Types I1/2 and II Eph Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors: Structure-Based Design, Synthesis, and in Vivo Validation.

Andrea Unzue; Jing Dong; Karine Lafleur; Hongtao Zhao; Emilie Frugier; Amedeo Caflisch; Cristina Nevado

The X-ray crystal structures of the catalytic domain of the EphA3 tyrosine kinase in complex with two type I inhibitors previously discovered in silico (compounds A and B) were used to design type I1/2 and II inhibitors. Chemical synthesis of about 25 derivatives culminated in the discovery of compounds 11d (type I1/2), 7b, and 7g (both of type II), which have low-nanomolar affinity for Eph kinases in vitro and a good selectivity profile on a panel of 453 human kinases (395 nonmutant). Surface plasmon resonance measurements show a very slow unbinding rate (1/115 min) for inhibitor 7m. Slow dissociation is consistent with a type II binding mode in which the hydrophobic moiety (trifluoromethyl-benzene) of the inhibitor is deeply buried in a cavity originating from the displacement of the Phe side chain of the so-called DFG motif as observed in the crystal structure of compound 7m. The inhibitor 11d displayed good in vivo efficacy in a human breast cancer xenograft.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Three stories on Eph kinase inhibitors: From in silico discovery to in vivo validation.

Andrea Unzue; Karine Lafleur; Hongtao Zhao; Ting Zhou; Jing Dong; Peter Kolb; Johanna Liebl; Stefan Zahler; Amedeo Caflisch; Cristina Nevado

Several selective and potent EphB4 inhibitors have been discovered, optimized and biophysically characterized by our groups over the past years. On the outset of these discoveries high throughput docking techniques were applied. Herein, we review the optimization campaigns started from three of these hits (Xan-A1, Pyr-A1 and Qui-A1) with emphasis on their in depth in vitro and in vivo characterization, together with previously unpublished angiogenesis and fluorescence based assays.


ACS central science | 2018

Chemical Space Expansion of Bromodomain Ligands Guided by in Silico Virtual Couplings (AutoCouple)

Laurent Batiste; Andrea Unzue; Aymeric Dolbois; Fabrice Hassler; Xuan Wang; Nicholas Deerain; Jian Zhu; Dimitrios Spiliotopoulos; Cristina Nevado; Amedeo Caflisch

Expanding the chemical space and simultaneously ensuring synthetic accessibility is of upmost importance, not only for the discovery of effective binders for novel protein classes but, more importantly, for the development of compounds against hard-to-drug proteins. Here, we present AutoCouple, a de novo approach to computational ligand design focused on the diversity-oriented generation of chemical entities via virtual couplings. In a benchmark application, chemically diverse compounds with low-nanomolar potency for the CBP bromodomain and high selectivity against the BRD4(1) bromodomain were achieved by the synthesis of about 50 derivatives of the original fragment. The binding mode was confirmed by X-ray crystallography, target engagement in cells was demonstrated, and antiproliferative activity was showcased in three cancer cell lines. These results reveal AutoCouple as a useful in silico coupling method to expand the chemical space in hit optimization campaigns resulting in potent, selective, and cell permeable bromodomain ligands.


ChemMedChem | 2018

Structural Analysis of Small Molecule Binding to the BAZ2A and BAZ2B Bromodomains.

A. Dalle Vedove; Dimitrios Spiliotopoulos; V.G. D'Agostino; Jean-Rémy Marchand; Andrea Unzue; Cristina Nevado; Graziano Lolli; Amedeo Caflisch


Archive | 2018

Crystal Structure of BAZ2A bromodomain in complex with acetylindole compound UZH47

A. Dalle Vedove; Andrea Unzue; Cristina Nevado; Graziano Lolli; Amedeo Caflisch


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2018

Abstract B182: The novel tyrosine kinase inhibitors UJ26 and UJ30 are active in solid tumor and hematologic cancer cell lines

Chiara Tarantelli; Eugenio Gaudio; Andrea Unzue; Pawel Sledz; Hillarie Ekeh; Elena Bernasconi; Filippo Spriano; Cristina Nevado; Amedeo Caflisch; Francesco Bertoni


Chemical Science | 2018

Iriomoteolides: novel chemical tools to study actin dynamics

Andrea Unzue; R. Cribiú; M. M. Hoffman; Tim Knehans; Karine Lafleur; Amedeo Caflisch; Cristina Nevado

Collaboration


Dive into the Andrea Unzue's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jian Zhu

University of Zurich

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Min Xu

University of Zurich

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge