Andrew M. Lipchik
Purdue University
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Featured researches published by Andrew M. Lipchik.
Analytical Chemistry | 2013
Andrew M. Lipchik; Laurie L. Parker
Disruption of regulatory protein phosphorylation can lead to disease and is particularly prevalent in cancers. Inhibitors that target deregulated kinases are therefore a major focus of chemotherapeutic development. Achieving sensitivity and specificity in high-throughput compatible kinase assays is key to successful inhibitor development. Here, we describe the application of time-resolved luminescence detection to the direct sensing of spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) activity and inhibition using a novel peptide substrate. Chelation and luminescence sensitization of Tb(3+) allowed the direct detection of peptide phosphorylation without any antibodies or other labeling reagents. Characterizing the Tb(3+) coordination properties of the phosphorylated vs unphosphorylated form of the peptide revealed that an inner-sphere water was displaced upon phosphorylation, which likely was responsible for both enhancing the luminescence intensity and also extending the lifetime, which enabled gating of the luminescence signal to improve the dynamic range. Furthermore, a shift in the optimal absorbance maximum for excitation was observed, from 275 nm (for the unphosphorylated tyrosine peptide) to 266 nm (for the phosphorylated tyrosine peptide). Accordingly, time-resolved measurements with excitation at 266 nm via a monochromator enabled a 16-fold improvement in base signal-to-noise for distinguishing phosphopeptide from unphosphorylated peptide. This led to a high degree of sensitivity and quantitative reproducibility, demonstrating the amenability of this method to both research laboratory and high-throughput applications.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Andrew M. Lipchik; Minervo Perez; Scott Charles Bolton; Vasin Dumrongprechachan; Steven B. Ouellette; Wei Cui; Laurie L. Parker
Nonreceptor protein tyrosine kinases (NRTKs) are essential for cellular homeostasis and thus are a major focus of current drug discovery efforts. Peptide substrates that can enhance lanthanide ion luminescence upon tyrosine phosphorylation enable rapid, sensitive screening of kinase activity, however design of suitable substrates that can distinguish between tyrosine kinase families is a huge challenge. Despite their different substrate preferences, many NRTKs are structurally similar even between families. Furthermore, the development of lanthanide-based kinase assays is hampered by incomplete understanding of how to integrate sequence selectivity with metal ion binding, necessitating laborious iterative substrate optimization. We used curated proteomic data from endogenous kinase substrates and known Tb(3+)-binding sequences to build a generalizable in silico pipeline with tools to generate, screen, align, and select potential phosphorylation-dependent Tb(3+)-sensitizing substrates that are most likely to be kinase specific. We demonstrated the approach by developing several substrates that are selective within kinase families and amenable to high-throughput screening (HTS) applications. Overall, this strategy represents a pipeline for developing efficient and specific assays for virtually any tyrosine kinase that use HTS-compatible lanthanide-based detection. The tools provided in the pipeline also have the potential to be adapted to identify peptides for other purposes, including other enzyme assays or protein-binding ligands.
Biochemistry | 2012
Andrew M. Lipchik; Renee L. Killins; Robert L. Geahlen; Laurie L. Parker
Spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) has been implicated in a number of pathologies including cancer and rheumatoid arthritis and thus has been pursued as a novel therapeutic target. Because of the complex relationship between Syks auto- and other internal phosphorylation sites, scaffolding proteins, enzymatic activation state and sites of phosphorylation on its known substrates, the role of Syks activity in these diseases has not been completely clear. To approach such analyses, we developed a Syk-specific artificial peptide biosensor (SAStide) to use in a cell-based assay for direct detection of intracellular Syk activity and inhibition in response to physiologically relevant stimuli in both laboratory cell lines and primary splenic B cells. This peptide contains a sequence derived from known Syk substrate preference motifs linked to a cell permeable peptide, resulting in a biosensor that is phosphorylated in live cells in a Syk-dependent manner, thus serving as a reporter of Syk catalytic activity in intact cells. Because the assay is compatible with live, primary cells and can report pharmacodynamics for drug action on an intended target, this methodology could be used to facilitate a better understanding of Syks function and the effect of its inhibition in disease.
Analytical Chemistry | 2015
Andrew M. Lipchik; Minervo Perez; Wei Cui; Laurie L. Parker
Kinase signaling is a major mechanism driving many cancers. While many inhibitors have been developed and are employed in the clinic, resistance due to crosstalk and pathway reprogramming is an emerging problem. High-throughput assays to detect multiple pathway kinases simultaneously could better model these complex relationships and enable drug development to combat this type of resistance. We developed a strategy to take advantage of time-resolved luminescence of Tb(3+)-chelated phosphotyrosine-containing peptides, which facilitated efficient energy transfer to small molecule fluorophores conjugated to the peptides to produce orthogonally colored biosensors for two different kinases. This enabled multiplexed detection with high signal-to-noise in a high-throughput-compatible format. This proof-of-concept study provides a platform that could be applied to other lanthanide metal and fluorophore combinations to achieve even greater multiplexing without the need for phosphospecific antibodies.
Cellular Signalling | 2012
Victoria A. Martin; Wen Horng Wang; Andrew M. Lipchik; Laurie L. Parker; Yantao He; Sheng Zhang; Zhong Yin Zhang; Robert L. Geahlen
The engagement of antigen receptors on lymphocytes leads to the activation of phospholipase C-γ, the mobilization of intracellular calcium and the activation of the NFAT transcription factor. The coupling of antigen receptors to the activation of NFAT is modulated by numerous cellular effectors including phospho-inositide 3-kinase (PI3K), which is activated following receptor cross-linking. The activation of PI3K has both positive and negative effects on the receptor-mediated activation of NFAT. An increase in the level and activity of Akt2, a target of activated PI3K, potently inhibits the subsequent activation of NFAT. In contrast, an elevation in Akt1 has no effect on signaling. Signaling pathways operating both upstream and downstream of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3)-stimulated calcium release from intracellular stores are unaffected by Akt2. An increase in the level of Akt2 has no significant effect on the initial amplitude, but substantially reduces the duration of calcium mobilization. The ability of Akt2 to inhibit prolonged calcium mobilization is abrogated by the administration of a cell permeable peptide that blocks the interaction between Bcl-2 and the IP3 receptor. Thus, Akt2 is a negative regulator of NFAT activation through its ability to inhibit calcium mobilization from the ER.
Analytical Chemistry | 2013
Lianghai Hu; Li Yang; Andrew M. Lipchik; Robert L. Geahlen; Laurie L. Parker; W. Andy Tao
Characterization of ligand-protein binding is of crucial importance in drug discovery. Classical competition binding assays measure the binding of a labeled ligand in the presence of various concentrations of unlabeled ligand and typically use single purified proteins. Here, we introduce a high-throughput approach to study ligand-protein interactions by coupling competition binding assays with mass spectrometry-based quantitative proteomics. With the use of a phosphorylated immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (pITAM) peptide as a model, we characterized pITAM-interacting partners in human lymphocytes. The shapes of competition binding curves of various interacting partners constructed in a single set of quantitative proteomics experiments reflect relative affinities for the pITAM peptide. This strategy can provide an efficient approach to distinguish specific interacting partners, including two signaling kinases possessing tandem SH2 domains, SYK and ZAP-70, as well as other SH2 domain-containing proteins such as CSK and PI3K, from contaminants and to measure relative binding affinities of multiple proteins in a single experiment.
Cancer Research | 2012
Andrew M. Lipchik; Laurie L. Parker
Spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) plays an important role in multiple B-cell signaling pathways. Deregulation of Syk activity has been shown to contribute to various malignant B-cell disorders including non-Hodgkin9s lymphomas and chronic lymphocytic leukemia making Syk a potential drug target. However, monitoring the therapeutic response of Syk can be convoluted by the phosphorylation state of Syk or its downstream targets not always correlating with its enzymatic activity. Currently, there are few methods available for monitoring Syk activity directly. Peptide-based approaches allow for direct detection of kinase activity circumventing the need to assess phosphorylation status of the kinase. Peptides have been applied to the detection of Syk activity in the past using fluorescent amino acids, but these approaches have not yet reached an optimized degree of specificity or signal to noise. Chelation with terbium has been used to achieve phosphorylation-dependent luminescence with substrate peptides. Terbium is a hard acid giving it preferred coordination with negatively charged species such as phosphate, carboxylate and carbonyl groups. Terbium as a luminescent probe for detection of phosphorylation offers several advantages over organic fluorophores. Terbium has unique optical properties including large stokes shifts, long luminescent lifetimes, and narrow emission bands. Recently, we have developed a Syk specific artificial substrate peptide (SAStide) consisting of an acidic motif with a central tyrosine capable of detecting intracellular Syk activity. We have characterized SAStide9s ability to chelate terbium and sensitize terbium luminescence in a phosphorylation-dependent manner. Here we present the use of time-resolved luminescence through terbium sensitization for detection of Syk activity and inhibition using SAStide in vitro. Citation Format: Andrew M. Lipchik, Laurie L. Parker. Time-resolved luminescence detection of spleen tyrosine kinase activity through terbium sensitization [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference on Chemical Systems Biology: Assembling and Interrogating Computational Models of the Cancer Cell by Chemical Perturbations; 2012 Jun 27-30; Boston, MA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2012;72(13 Suppl):Abstract nr A18.
Current Biology | 2014
Junhong Gui; Boyi Liu; Guan Cao; Andrew M. Lipchik; Minervo Perez; Zoltan Dekan; Mehdi Mobli; Norelle L. Daly; Paul F. Alewood; Laurie L. Parker; Glenn F. King; Yufeng Zhou; Sven-Eric Jordt; Michael N. Nitabach
Analytical Biochemistry | 2010
Ekaterina A. Placzek; Michael P. Plebanek; Andrew M. Lipchik; Stephanie Kidd; Laurie L. Parker
Archive | 2014
Laurie L. Parker; Joseph Irudayaraj; Andrew M. Lipchik; Nur P. Damayanti