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Dive into the research topics where Arthur D. Clark is active.

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Featured researches published by Arthur D. Clark.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

Crystal structure of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase in complex with a polypurine tract RNA:DNA.

Stefan G. Sarafianos; Kalyan Das; Chris Tantillo; Arthur D. Clark; Jianping Ding; Jeannette M. Whitcomb; Paul L. Boyer; Stephen H. Hughes; Edward Arnold

We have determined the 3.0 Å resolution structure of wild‐type HIV‐1 reverse transcriptase in complex with an RNA:DNA oligonucleotide whose sequence includes a purine‐rich segment from the HIV‐1 genome called the polypurine tract (PPT). The PPT is resistant to ribonuclease H (RNase H) cleavage and is used as a primer for second DNA strand synthesis. The ‘RNase H primer grip’, consisting of amino acids that interact with the DNA primer strand, may contribute to RNase H catalysis and cleavage specificity. Cleavage specificity is also controlled by the width of the minor groove and the trajectory of the RNA:DNA, both of which are sequence dependent. An unusual ‘unzipping’ of 7 bp occurs in the adenine stretch of the PPT: an unpaired base on the template strand takes the base pairing out of register and then, following two offset base pairs, an unpaired base on the primer strand re‐establishes the normal register. The structural aberration extends to the RNase H active site and may play a role in the resistance of PPT to RNase H cleavage.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

High-resolution structures of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase/TMC278 complexes: Strategic flexibility explains potency against resistance mutations.

Kalyan Das; Joseph D. Bauman; Arthur D. Clark; Yulia Volovik Frenkel; Paul J. Lewi; Aaron J. Shatkin; Stephen H. Hughes; Eddy Arnold

TMC278 is a diarylpyrimidine (DAPY) nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) that is highly effective in treating wild-type and drug-resistant HIV-1 infections in clinical trials at relatively low doses (∼25–75 mg/day). We have determined the structure of wild-type HIV-1 RT complexed with TMC278 at 1.8 Å resolution, using an RT crystal form engineered by systematic RT mutagenesis. This high-resolution structure reveals that the cyanovinyl group of TMC278 is positioned in a hydrophobic tunnel connecting the NNRTI-binding pocket to the nucleic acid-binding cleft. The crystal structures of TMC278 in complexes with the double mutant K103N/Y181C (2.1 Å) and L100I/K103N HIV-1 RTs (2.9 Å) demonstrated that TMC278 adapts to bind mutant RTs. In the K103N/Y181C RT/TMC278 structure, loss of the aromatic ring interaction caused by the Y181C mutation is counterbalanced by interactions between the cyanovinyl group of TMC278 and the aromatic side chain of Y183, which is facilitated by an ∼1.5 Å shift of the conserved Y183MDD motif. In the L100I/K103N RT/TMC278 structure, the binding mode of TMC278 is significantly altered so that the drug conforms to changes in the binding pocket primarily caused by the L100I mutation. The flexible binding pocket acts as a molecular “shrink wrap” that makes a shape complementary to the optimized TMC278 in wild-type and drug-resistant forms of HIV-1 RT. The crystal structures provide a better understanding of how the flexibility of an inhibitor can compensate for drug-resistance mutations.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

Structures of HIV‐1 reverse transcriptase with pre‐ and post‐translocation AZTMP‐terminated DNA

Stefan G. Sarafianos; Arthur D. Clark; Kalyan Das; Steve Tuske; Jens J. Birktoft; Palanichamy Ilankumaran; Andagar R. Ramesha; Jane M. Sayer; Donald M. Jerina; Paul L. Boyer; Stephen H. Hughes; Eddy Arnold

AZT (3′‐azido‐3′‐deoxythymidine) resistance involves the enhanced excision of AZTMP from the end of the primer strand by HIV‐1 reverse transcriptase. This reaction can occur when an AZTMP‐terminated primer is bound at the nucleotide‐binding site (pre‐translocation complex N) but not at the ‘priming’ site (post‐translocation complex P). We determined the crystal structures of N and P complexes at 3.0 and 3.1 Å resolution. These structures provide insight into the structural basis of AZTMP excision and the mechanism of translocation. Docking of a dNTP in the P complex structure suggests steric crowding in forming a stable ternary complex that should increase the relative amount of the N complex, which is the substrate for excision. Structural differences between complexes N and P suggest that the conserved YMDD loop is involved in translocation, acting as a springboard that helps to propel the primer terminus from the N to the P site after dNMP incorporation.


Cell | 2005

Inhibition of bacterial RNA polymerase by streptolydigin: stabilization of a straight-bridge-helix active-center conformation.

Steven Tuske; Stefan G. Sarafianos; Xinyue Wang; Brian P. Hudson; Elena Sineva; Jayanta Mukhopadhyay; Jens J. Birktoft; Olivier Leroy; Sajida Ismail; Arthur D. Clark; Chhaya Dharia; Andrew A. Napoli; Oleg Laptenko; Jookyung Lee; Sergei Borukhov; Richard H. Ebright; Eddy Arnold

We define the target, mechanism, and structural basis of inhibition of bacterial RNA polymerase (RNAP) by the tetramic acid antibiotic streptolydigin (Stl). Stl binds to a site adjacent to but not overlapping the RNAP active center and stabilizes an RNAP-active-center conformational state with a straight-bridge helix. The results provide direct support for the proposals that alternative straight-bridge-helix and bent-bridge-helix RNAP-active-center conformations exist and that cycling between straight-bridge-helix and bent-bridge-helix RNAP-active-center conformations is required for RNAP function. The results set bounds on models for RNAP function and suggest strategies for design of novel antibacterial agents.


Structure | 2009

Structure of HIV-1 Reverse Transcriptase with the Inhibitor β-thujaplicinol Bound at the RNase H Active Site

Daniel M. Himmel; Karen Maegley; Tom Pauly; Joseph D. Bauman; Kalyan Das; Chhaya Dharia; Arthur D. Clark; Kevin Ryan; Michael J. Hickey; Robert Love; Stephen H. Hughes; Simon Bergqvist; Eddy Arnold

Novel inhibitors are needed to counteract the rapid emergence of drug-resistant HIV variants. HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) has both DNA polymerase and RNase H (RNH) enzymatic activities, but approved drugs that inhibit RT target the polymerase. Inhibitors that act against new targets, such as RNH, should be effective against all of the current drug-resistant variants. Here, we present 2.80 A and 2.04 A resolution crystal structures of an RNH inhibitor, beta-thujaplicinol, bound at the RNH active site of both HIV-1 RT and an isolated RNH domain. beta-thujaplicinol chelates two divalent metal ions at the RNH active site. We provide biochemical evidence that beta-thujaplicinol is a slow-binding RNH inhibitor with noncompetitive kinetics and suggest that it forms a tropylium ion that interacts favorably with RT and the RNA:DNA substrate.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2010

Structural basis of HIV-1 resistance to AZT by excision.

Xiongying Tu; Kalyan Das; Qianwei Han; Joseph D. Bauman; Arthur D. Clark; Xiaorong Hou; Yulia Volovik Frenkel; Barbara L. Gaffney; Roger A. Jones; Paul L. Boyer; Stephen H. Hughes; Stefan G. Sarafianos; Eddy Arnold

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) develops resistance to 3′-azido-2′,3′-deoxythymidine (AZT, zidovudine) by acquiring mutations in reverse transcriptase that enhance the ATP-mediated excision of AZT monophosphate from the 3′ end of the primer. The excision reaction occurs at the dNTP-binding site, uses ATP as a pyrophosphate donor, unblocks the primer terminus and allows reverse transcriptase to continue viral DNA synthesis. The excision product is AZT adenosine dinucleoside tetraphosphate (AZTppppA). We determined five crystal structures: wild-type reverse transcriptase–double-stranded DNA (RT–dsDNA)–AZTppppA; AZT-resistant (AZTr; M41L D67N K70R T215Y K219Q) RT–dsDNA–AZTppppA; AZTr RT–dsDNA terminated with AZT at dNTP- and primer-binding sites; and AZTr apo reverse transcriptase. The AMP part of AZTppppA bound differently to wild-type and AZTr reverse transcriptases, whereas the AZT triphosphate part bound the two enzymes similarly. Thus, the resistance mutations create a high-affinity ATP-binding site. The structure of the site provides an opportunity to design inhibitors of AZT-monophosphate excision.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Structural basis for the role of the K65R mutation in HIV-1 reverse transcriptase polymerization, excision antagonism, and tenofovir resistance

Kalyan Das; Rajiv P. Bandwar; Kirsten L. White; Joy Y. Feng; Stefan G. Sarafianos; Steven Tuske; Xiongying Tu; Arthur D. Clark; Paul L. Boyer; Xiaorong Hou; Barbara L. Gaffney; Roger A. Jones; Michael D. Miller; Stephen H. Hughes; Eddy Arnold

K65R is a primary reverse transcriptase (RT) mutation selected in human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected patients taking antiretroviral regimens containing tenofovir disoproxil fumarate or other nucleoside analog RT drugs. We determined the crystal structures of K65R mutant RT cross-linked to double-stranded DNA and in complexes with tenofovir diphosphate (TFV-DP) or dATP. The crystals permit substitution of TFV-DP with dATP at the dNTP-binding site. The guanidinium planes of the arginines K65R and Arg72 were stacked to form a molecular platform that restricts the conformational adaptability of both of the residues, which explains the negative effects of the K65R mutation on nucleotide incorporation and on excision. Furthermore, the guanidinium planes of K65R and Arg72 were stacked in two different rotameric conformations in TFV-DP- and dATP-bound structures that may help explain how K65R RT discriminates the drug from substrates. These K65R-mediated effects on RT structure and function help us to visualize the complex interaction with other key nucleotide RT drug resistance mutations, such as M184V, L74V, and thymidine analog resistance mutations.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

Crystal engineering of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase for structure-based drug design

Joseph D. Bauman; Kalyan Das; William C. Ho; Mukta Baweja; Daniel M. Himmel; Arthur D. Clark; Deena A. Oren; Paul L. Boyer; Stephen H. Hughes; Aaron J. Shatkin; Eddy Arnold

HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) is a primary target for anti-AIDS drugs. Structures of HIV-1 RT, usually determined at ∼2.5–3.0 Å resolution, are important for understanding enzyme function and mechanisms of drug resistance in addition to being helpful in the design of RT inhibitors. Despite hundreds of attempts, it was not possible to obtain the structure of a complex of HIV-1 RT with TMC278, a nonnucleoside RT inhibitor (NNRTI) in advanced clinical trials. A systematic and iterative protein crystal engineering approach was developed to optimize RT for obtaining crystals in complexes with TMC278 and other NNRTIs that diffract X-rays to 1.8 Å resolution. Another form of engineered RT was optimized to produce a high-resolution apo-RT crystal form, reported here at 1.85 Å resolution, with a distinct RT conformation. Engineered RTs were mutagenized using a new, flexible and cost effective method called methylated overlap-extension ligation independent cloning. Our analysis suggests that reducing the solvent content, increasing lattice contacts, and stabilizing the internal low-energy conformations of RT are critical for the growth of crystals that diffract to high resolution. The new RTs enable rapid crystallization and yield high-resolution structures that are useful in designing/developing new anti-AIDS drugs.


Drugs in R & D | 2004

Correlations between Factors Determining the Pharmacokinetics and Antiviral Activity of HIV-1 Non-Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors of the Diaryltriazine and Diarylpyrimidine Classes of Compounds

Paul J. Lewi; Eddy Arnold; Koen Andries; Hilde Bohets; Herman Borghys; Arthur D. Clark; Frits Daeyaert; Kalyan Das; Marie-Pierre de Béthune; Marc René De Jonge; Jan Heeres; Luc Koymans; Jos Leempoels; Jef Peeters; Philip Timmerman; Walter Van den Broeck; Frédéric Vanhoutte; Gerben van 't Klooster; Maarten Vinkers; Yulia Volovik; Paul A. J. Janssen

AbstractObjective: To investigate the important factors that determine the bioavailability and the antiviral activity of the diaryltriazine (DATA) and diarylpyrimidine (DAPY) non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) of HIV-1 in animal species and humans using cell-based assays, physicochemical and comput ed parameters. Methods: This naturalistic study included 15 parameters ranging from molecular mechanics calculations to phase I clinical trials. The calculated parameters were solvent-accessible surface area (SASA), polar surface area and Gibbs free energy of solvation. Physicochemical parameters comprised lipophilicity (octanol/water partition coefficient [cLogP]), ionisation constant (pKa), solubility and aggregate radius. Cell-based assays included human colonic adenocarcinoma cell (Caco-2) permeability (transepithelial transport), drug metabolism and antiviral activity (negative logarithm of the molar effective concentration inhibiting viral replica tion by 50% [pEC50]). Exposure was tested in rats, dogs and human volunteers. Results: Of the 15 parameters, eight correlated consistently among one another. Exposure (area under the plasma concentration-time curve [AUC]) in humans correlated positively with that in rats (r = 1.00), with transepithelial transport (r = 0.83), lipophilicity (r = 0.60), ionisability (r = 0.89), hydrodynamic radius of aggregates (r = 0.66) and with antiviral activity (r = 0.61). Exposure in humans was also seen to correlate negatively with SASA (r = −0.89). No consistent correlation was found between exposure in dogs and the eight parameters. Of the 14 DATA/DAPY molecules, 11 form aggregates with radii between 34 and 100nm. Conclusions: We observed correlations between exposure in humans with expo sure in rats, transepithelial transport (Caco-2 cells), ionisability, lipophilicity, aggregate radius and SASA in the class of DATA/DAPY NNRTI compounds. The lipophilic DATA/DAPY compounds form aggregates. It can be assumed that absorption in the intestinal tract and endocytosis in infected cells of these lipophilic compounds are governed by the common phenomenon of aggregate formation. As the lymphatic system offers a pathway for intestinal uptake of aggregates, this may offer a therapeutic advantage in the treatment of HIV-1 infection. Although it was not the objective of the study, we found that the rat was a better in vivo model than the dog for the prediction of systemic exposure in this particular set of compounds.


Acta Crystallographica Section A | 2008

Role of structures in designing anti-AIDS drugs targeting reverse transcriptase

Kalyan Das; J.D. Baruman; R. Bandwar; Arthur D. Clark; Stephen H. Hughes; Edward Arnold

from the device is monochromatized with liquid-N2 cooled double crystal monochromator, and will be focused by using K-B mirrors fabricated with Elastic Emission Machinery. Ray trace calculation with the designed configurations shows achievable beam size at sample position corresponds to 1 x 2 μm with 10 phtons/sec. Beam size is designed to be changeable from about 1~25 μm according to designed experiments. The new beamline will largely benefits users by cutting off their wasting time to optimize crystallization conditions especially for smaller and lower quality crystals. The beamline will provide high quality diffraction datasets from micro crystals. Besides, users will be able to probe single-crystal volumes from a heterogeneous protein crystal using the micro-beam. Designed optics and instrumentations to be equipped such as an automated sample changer, advanced software to avoid serious radiation damages and so on will be also presented.

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Stephen H. Hughes

National Institutes of Health

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Kalyan Das

Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine

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Eddy Arnold

Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine

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Edward Arnold

Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine

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Paul L. Boyer

National Institutes of Health

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Stefan G. Sarafianos

Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine

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Jianping Ding

Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine

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Jianping Ding

Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine

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Joseph D. Bauman

Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine

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