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Dive into the research topics where Annette M. Evangelisti is active.

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Featured researches published by Annette M. Evangelisti.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2013

Fluorescent substrates for flow cytometric evaluation of efflux inhibition in ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2 transporters

J. Jacob Strouse; Irena Ivnitski-Steele; Anna Waller; Susan M. Young; Dominique Perez; Annette M. Evangelisti; Oleg Ursu; Cristian G. Bologa; Mark B. Carter; Virginia M. Salas; George P. Tegos; Richard S. Larson; Tudor I. Oprea; Bruce S. Edwards; Larry A. Sklar

ATP binding cassette (ABC) transmembrane efflux pumps such as P-glycoprotein (ABCB1), multidrug resistance protein 1 (ABCC1), and breast cancer resistance protein (ABCG2) play an important role in anticancer drug resistance. A large number of structurally and functionally diverse compounds act as substrates or modulators of these pumps. In vitro assessment of the affinity of drug candidates for multidrug resistance proteins is central to predict in vivo pharmacokinetics and drug-drug interactions. The objective of this study was to identify and characterize new substrates for these transporters. As part of a collaborative project with Life Technologies, 102 fluorescent probes were investigated in a flow cytometric screen of ABC transporters. The primary screen compared substrate efflux activity in parental cell lines with their corresponding highly expressing resistant counterparts. The fluorescent compound library included a range of excitation/emission profiles and required dual laser excitation as well as multiple fluorescence detection channels. A total of 31 substrates with active efflux in one or more pumps and practical fluorescence response ranges were identified and tested for interaction with eight known inhibitors. This screening approach provides an efficient tool for identification and characterization of new fluorescent substrates for ABCB1, ABCC1, and ABCG2.


Genome Biology and Evolution | 2010

Nonrandom Survival of Gene Conversions among Yeast Ribosomal Proteins Duplicated through Genome Doubling

Annette M. Evangelisti; Gavin C. Conant

By comparing the patterns of evolution in the coding and upstream noncoding regions of yeast ribosomal protein (RP) genes duplicated in a genome duplication, we find that although nonsynonymous sites in the coding sequences show strong evidence for the fixation of recent gene conversion events, similar patterns are less evident among the synonymous positions and noncoding regulatory elements. This result suggests a potential explanation for the somewhat puzzling fact that duplicated RP genes are not functionally redundant despite their very high protein sequence identity. An analysis of the patterns of regulatory network evolution after genome duplication also indicates that the duplicated proteins have diverged considerably in expression despite their similar protein sequences.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2013

A Selective ATP-Binding Cassette Subfamily G Member 2 Efflux Inhibitor Revealed via High-Throughput Flow Cytometry

J. Jacob Strouse; Irena Ivnitski-Steele; Hadya M. Khawaja; Dominique Perez; Jerec Ricci; Tuanli Yao; Warren S. Weiner; Chad E. Schroeder; Denise S. Simpson; Brooks E. Maki; Kelin Li; Jennifer E. Golden; Terry D. Foutz; Anna Waller; Annette M. Evangelisti; Susan M. Young; Stephanie E. Chavez; Matthew Garcia; Oleg Ursu; Cristian G. Bologa; Mark B. Carter; Virginia M. Salas; Kristine Gouveia; George P. Tegos; Tudor I. Oprea; Bruce S. Edwards; Jeffrey Aubé; Richard S. Larson; Larry A. Sklar

Chemotherapeutics tumor resistance is a principal reason for treatment failure, and clinical and experimental data indicate that multidrug transporters such as ATP-binding cassette (ABC) B1 and ABCG2 play a leading role by preventing cytotoxic intracellular drug concentrations. Functional efflux inhibition of existing chemotherapeutics by these pumps continues to present a promising approach for treatment. A contributing factor to the failure of existing inhibitors in clinical applications is limited understanding of specific substrate/inhibitor/pump interactions. We have identified selective efflux inhibitors by profiling multiple ABC transporters against a library of small molecules to find molecular probes to further explore such interactions. In our primary screening protocol using JC-1 as a dual-pump fluorescent reporter substrate, we identified a piperazine-substituted pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine substructure with promise for selective efflux inhibition. As a result of a focused structure-activity relationship (SAR)–driven chemistry effort, we describe compound 1 (CID44640177), an efflux inhibitor with selectivity toward ABCG2 over ABCB1. Compound 1 is also shown to potentiate the activity of mitoxantrone in vitro as well as preliminarily in vivo in an ABCG2-overexpressing tumor model. At least two analogues significantly reduce tumor size in combination with the chemotherapeutic topotecan. To our knowledge, low nanomolar chemoreversal activity coupled with direct evidence of efflux inhibition for ABCG2 is unprecedented.


Drug Discovery Today: Technologies | 2014

A high throughput flow cytometric assay platform targeting transporter inhibition.

George P. Tegos; Annette M. Evangelisti; J. Jacob Strouse; Oleg Ursu; Cristian G. Bologa; Larry A. Sklar

This review highlights the concepts, recent applications and limitations of High Throughput Screening (HTS) flow cytometry-based efflux inhibitory assays. This platform has been employed in mammalian and yeast efflux systems leading to the identification of small molecules with transporter inhibitory capabilities. This technology offers the possibility of substrate multiplexing and may promote novel strategies targeting microbial efflux systems. This platform can generate a comprehensive dataset that may support efforts to map the interface between chemistry and transporter biology in a variety of pathogenic systems.


Oncotarget | 2016

Cyclic AMP efflux inhibitors as potential therapeutic agents for leukemia

Dominique Perez; Yelena Smagley; Matthew Garcia; Mark B. Carter; Annette M. Evangelisti; Ksenia Matlawska-Wasowska; Stuart S. Winter; Larry A. Sklar; Alexandre Chigaev

Apoptotic evasion is a hallmark of cancer. We propose that some cancers may evade cell death by regulating 3′-5′-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), which is associated with pro-apoptotic signaling. We hypothesize that leukemic cells possess mechanisms that efflux cAMP from the cytoplasm, thus protecting them from apoptosis. Accordingly, cAMP efflux inhibition should result in: cAMP accumulation, activation of cAMP-dependent downstream signaling, viability loss, and apoptosis. We developed a novel assay to assess cAMP efflux and performed screens to identify inhibitors. In an acute myeloid leukemia (AML) model, several identified compounds reduced cAMP efflux, appropriately modulated pathways that are responsive to cAMP elevation (cAMP-responsive element-binding protein phosphorylation, and deactivation of Very Late Antigen-4 integrin), and induced mitochondrial depolarization and caspase activation. Blocking adenylyl cyclase activity was sufficient to reduce effects of the most potent compounds. These compounds also decreased cAMP efflux and viability of B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) cell lines and primary patient samples, but not of normal primary peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Our data suggest that cAMP efflux is a functional feature that could be therapeutically targeted in leukemia. Furthermore, because some of the identified drugs are currently used for treating other illnesses, this work creates an opportunity for repurposing.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2016

Discovery of Small-Molecule Nonfluorescent Inhibitors of Fluorogen–Fluorogen Activating Protein Binding Pair

Yang Wu; Shaun R. Stauffer; Robyn L. Stanfield; Phillip H. Tapia; Oleg Ursu; Gregory W. Fisher; Christopher Szent-Gyorgyi; Annette M. Evangelisti; Anna Waller; J. Jacob Strouse; Mark B. Carter; Cristian G. Bologa; Kristine Gouveia; Mike Poslusney; Alan S. Waggoner; Craig W. Lindsley; Jonathan W. Jarvik; Larry A. Sklar

A new class of biosensors, fluorogen activating proteins (FAPs), has been successfully used to track receptor trafficking in live cells. Unlike the traditional fluorescent proteins (FPs), FAPs do not fluoresce unless bound to their specific small-molecule fluorogens, and thus FAP-based assays are highly sensitive. Application of the FAP-based assay for protein trafficking in high-throughput flow cytometry resulted in the discovery of a new class of compounds that interferes with the binding between fluorogens and FAP, thus blocking the fluorescence signal. These compounds are high-affinity, nonfluorescent analogs of fluorogens with little or no toxicity to the tested cells and no apparent interference with the normal function of FAP-tagged receptors. The most potent compound among these, N,4-dimethyl-N-(2-oxo-2-(4-(pyridin-2-yl)piperazin-1-yl)ethyl)benzenesulfonamide (ML342), has been investigated in detail. X-ray crystallographic analysis revealed that ML342 competes with the fluorogen, sulfonated thiazole orange coupled to diethylene glycol diamine (TO1-2p), for the same binding site on a FAP, AM2.2. Kinetic analysis shows that the FAP-fluorogen interaction is more complex than a homogeneous one-site binding process, with multiple conformational states of the fluorogen and/or the FAP, and possible dimerization of the FAP moiety involved in the process.


Journal of Experimental Zoology | 2004

Molecular evolution in the yeast transcriptional regulation network.

Annette M. Evangelisti; Andreas Wagner


Archive | 2013

Profiling a Selective Probe for RTG Branch of Yeast TORC1 Signaling Pathway

Jun Chen; Susan M. Young; Christopher D.C. Allen; Anna Waller; Oleg Ursu; J. Jacob Strouse; Tuanli Yao; Jennifer E. Golden; Blake R. Peterson; Terry D. Foutz; Stephanie E. Chavez; Dominique Perez; Annette M. Evangelisti; Mathew J. Garcia; Cristian G. Bologa; Mark B. Carter; Virginia M. Salas; Tudor I. Oprea; Bruce S. Edwards; Nicolas Panchaud; Claudio De Virgilio; Andrew Seeber; Robbie Loewith; Elaine Manzanilla; Margaret Werner-Washburne; Jeffrey Aubé; Larry A. Sklar


Archive | 2013

Figure 6, Screening flow chart

J. Jacob Strouse; Irena Ivnitski-Steele; Hadya M. Njus; Terry D. Foutz; Tuanli Yao; Warren S. Weiner; Chad E. Schroeder; Denise S. Simpson; Brooks E. Maki; Kelin Li; Jennifer E. Golden; Anna Waller; Annette M. Evangelisti; Susan M. Young; Dominique Perez; Stephanie E. Chavez; Mathew J. Garcia; Oleg Ursu; Dan C. Fara; Cristian G. Bologa; Mark B. Carter; Virginia M. Salas; George P. Tegos; Tudor I. Oprea; Bruce S. Edwards; Richard S. Larson; Jeffrey Aubé; Larry A. Sklar


Archive | 2013

Table 2, Continuation of SAR expansion on initial hit SID 85240370

J. Jacob Strouse; Irena Ivnitski-Steele; Hadya M. Njus; Terry D. Foutz; Tuanli Yao; Warren S. Weiner; Chad E. Schroeder; Denise S. Simpson; Brooks E. Maki; Kelin Li; Jennifer E. Golden; Anna Waller; Annette M. Evangelisti; Susan M. Young; Dominique Perez; Stephanie E. Chavez; Mathew J. Garcia; Oleg Ursu; Dan C. Fara; Cristian G. Bologa; Mark B. Carter; Virginia M. Salas; George P. Tegos; Tudor I. Oprea; Bruce S. Edwards; Richard S. Larson; Jeffrey Aubé; Larry A. Sklar

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Larry A. Sklar

University of New Mexico

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Mark B. Carter

University of New Mexico

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Oleg Ursu

University of New Mexico

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Anna Waller

University of New Mexico

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Susan M. Young

University of New Mexico

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Tudor I. Oprea

University of New Mexico

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