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Dive into the research topics where Benet Pera is active.

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Featured researches published by Benet Pera.


Chemistry & Biology | 2012

Zampanolide, a Potent New Microtubule-Stabilizing Agent, Covalently Reacts with the Taxane Luminal Site in Tubulin α,β-Heterodimers and Microtubules

Jessica J. Field; Benet Pera; Enrique Calvo; Ángeles Canales; Didier Zurwerra; Chiara Trigili; Javier Rodríguez-Salarichs; Ruth Matesanz; Arun Kanakkanthara; St. John Wakefield; A. Jonathan Singh; Jesús Jiménez-Barbero; Peter T. Northcote; John H. Miller; Juan Antonio López; Ernest Hamel; Isabel Barasoain; Karl-Heinz Altmann; José Fernando Díaz

Zampanolide and its less active analog dactylolide compete with paclitaxel for binding to microtubules and represent a new class of microtubule-stabilizing agent (MSA). Mass spectrometry demonstrated that the mechanism of action of both compounds involved covalent binding to β-tubulin at residues N228 and H229 in the taxane site of the microtubule. Alkylation of N228 and H229 was also detected in α,β-tubulin dimers. However, unlike cyclostreptin, the other known MSA that alkylates β-tubulin, zampanolide was a strong MSA. Modeling the structure of the adducts, using the NMR-derived dactylolide conformation, indicated that the stabilizing activity of zampanolide is likely due to interactions with the M-loop. Our results strongly support the existence of the luminal taxane site of microtubules in tubulin dimers and suggest that microtubule nucleation induction by MSAs may proceed through an allosteric mechanism.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Cpl-7, a lysozyme encoded by a pneumococcal bacteriophage with a novel cell wall-binding motif

Noemí Bustamante; Nuria E. Campillo; Ernesto García; Cristina Gallego; Benet Pera; Gregory P. Diakun; José L. Saiz; Pedro Gómez García; J. Fernando Díaz; Margarita Menéndez

Bacteriophage endolysins include a group of new antibacterials reluctant to development of resistance. We present here the first structural study of the Cpl-7 endolysin, encoded by pneumococcal bacteriophage Cp-7. It contains an N-terminal catalytic module (CM) belonging to the GH25 family of glycosyl hydrolases and a C-terminal region encompassing three identical repeats of 42 amino acids (CW_7 repeats). These repeats are unrelated to choline-targeting motifs present in other cell wall hydrolases produced by Streptococcus pneumoniae and its bacteriophages, and are responsible for the protein attachment to the cell wall. By combining different biophysical techniques and molecular modeling, a three-dimensional model of the overall protein structure is proposed, consistent with circular dichroism and sequence-based secondary structure prediction, small angle x-ray scattering data, and Cpl-7 hydrodynamic behavior. Cpl-7 is an ∼115-Å long molecule with two well differentiated regions, corresponding to the CM and the cell wall binding region (CWBR), arranged in a lateral disposition. The CM displays the (βα)5β3 barrel topology characteristic of the GH25 family, and the impact of sequence differences with the CM of the Cpl-1 lysozyme in substrate binding is discussed. The CWBR is organized in three tandemly assembled three-helical bundles whose dispositions remind us of a super-helical structure. Its approximate dimensions are 60 × 20 × 20 Å and presents a concave face that might constitute the functional region involved in bacterial surface recognition. The distribution of CW_7 repeats in the sequences deposited in the Entrez Database have been examined, and the results drastically expanded the antimicrobial potential of the Cpl-7 endolysin.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Structure-activity relationships of novel substituted naphthalene diimides as anticancer agents.

Andrea Milelli; Vincenzo Tumiatti; Marialuisa Micco; Michela Rosini; Guendalina Zuccari; Lizzia Raffaghello; Giovanna Bianchi; Vito Pistoia; J. Fernando Díaz; Benet Pera; Chiara Trigili; Isabel Barasoain; Caterina Musetti; Marianna Toniolo; Claudia Sissi; Stefano Alcaro; Federica Moraca; Maddalena Zini; Claudio Stefanelli; Anna Minarini

Novel 1,4,5,8-naphthalenetetracarboxylic diimide (NDI) derivatives were synthesized and evaluated for their antiproliferative activity on a wide number of different tumor cell lines. The prototypes of the present series were derivatives 1 and 2 characterized by interesting biological profiles as anticancer agents. The present investigation expands on the study of structure-activity relationships of prototypes 1 and 2, namely, the influence of the different substituents of the phenyl rings on the biological activity. Derivatives 3-22, characterized by a different substituent on the aromatic rings and/or a different chain length varying from two to three carbon units, were synthesized and evaluated for their cytostatic and cytotoxic activities. The most interesting compound was 20, characterized by a linker of three methylene units and a 2,3,4-trimethoxy substituent on the two aromatic rings. It displayed antiproliferative activity in the submicromolar range, especially against some different cell lines, the ability to inhibit Taq polymerase and telomerase, to trigger caspase activation by a possible oxidative mechanism, to downregulate ERK 2 protein and to inhibit ERKs phosphorylation, without acting directly on microtubules and tubuline. Its theoretical recognition against duplex and quadruplex DNA structures have been compared to experimental thermodynamic measurements and by molecular modeling investigation leading to putative binding modes. Taken together these findings contribute to define this compound as potential Multitarget-Directed Ligands interacting simultaneously with different biological targets.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2014

PM060184, a new tubulin binding agent with potent antitumor activity including P-glycoprotein over-expressing tumors.

Marta Martinez-Diez; María José Guillén-Navarro; Benet Pera; Benjamin Pierre Bouchet; Juan F. Martínez-Leal; Isabel Barasoain; Carmen Cuevas; Luis García-Fernández; J. Fernando Díaz; Pablo Aviles; Carlos M. Galmarini

PM060184 belongs to a new family of tubulin-binding agents originally isolated from the marine sponge Lithoplocamia lithistoides. This compound is currently produced by total synthesis and is under evaluation in clinical studies in patients with advanced cancer diseases. It was recently published that PM060184 presents the highest known affinities among tubulin-binding agents, and that it targets tubulin dimers at a new binding site. Here, we show that PM060184 has a potent antitumor activity in a panel of different tumor xenograft models. Moreover, PM060184 is able to overcome P-gp mediated resistance in vivo, an effect that could be related to its high binding affinity for tubulin. To gain insight into the mechanism responsible of the observed antitumor activity, we have characterized its molecular and cellular effects. We have observed that PM060184 is an inhibitor of tubulin polymerization that reduces microtubule dynamicity in cells by 59%. Interestingly, PM060184 suppresses microtubule shortening and growing at a similar extent. This action affects cells in interphase and mitosis. In the first case, the compound induces a disorganization and fragmentation of the microtubule network and the inhibition of cell migration. In the second case, it induces the appearance of multipolar mitosis and lagging chromosomes at the metaphase plate. These effects correlate with prometaphase arrest and induction of caspase-dependent apoptosis or appearance of cells in a multinucleated interphase-like state unrelated to classical apoptosis pathways. Taken together, these results indicate that PM060184 represents a new tubulin binding agent with promising potential as an anticancer agent.


ChemBioChem | 2010

Molecular recognition of peloruside A by microtubules. The C24 primary alcohol is essential for biological activity.

Benet Pera; Mina Razzak; Chiara Trigili; Oriol Pineda; Ángeles Canales; Rubén M. Buey; Jesús Jiménez-Barbero; Peter T. Northcote; Ian Paterson; Isabel Barasoain; José Fernando Díaz

Peloruside is a microtubule‐stabilizing agent that targets the same site as laulimalide. It binds to microtubules with a 1:1 stoichiometry and with a binding affinity in the low‐μM range; thereby reducing the number of microtubular protofilaments in the same way as paclitaxel. Although the binding affinity of the compound is comparable to that of the low‐affinity stabilizing agent sarcodictyin, peloruside is more active in inducing microtubule assembly and is more cytotoxic to tumor cells; this suggests that the peloruside site is a more effective site for stabilizing microtubules. Acetylation of the C24 hydroxyl group results in inactive compounds. According to molecular modeling, this substitution at the C24 hydroxyl group presumably disrupts the interaction of the side chain with Arg320 in the putative binding site on α‐tubulin. The binding epitope of peloruside on microtubules has been studied by using NMR spectroscopic techniques, and is compatible with the same binding site.


Biophysical Journal | 2011

Modulation of Microtubule Interprotofilament Interactions by Modified Taxanes

Ruth Matesanz; Javier Rodríguez-Salarichs; Benet Pera; Ángeles Canales; Jesús Jiménez-Barbero; Wim Bras; Aurora Nogales; Wei-Shuo Fang; José Fernando Díaz

Microtubules assembled with paclitaxel and docetaxel differ in their numbers of protofilaments, reflecting modification of the lateral association between αβ-tubulin molecules in the microtubule wall. These modifications of microtubule structure, through a not-yet-characterized mechanism, are most likely related to the changes in tubulin-tubulin interactions responsible for microtubule stabilization by these antitumor compounds. We have used a set of modified taxanes to study the structural mechanism of microtubule stabilization by these ligands. Using small-angle x-ray scattering, we have determined how modifications in the shape and size of the taxane substituents result in changes in the interprotofilament angles and in their number. The observed effects have been explained using NMR-aided docking and molecular dynamic simulations of taxane binding at the microtubule pore and luminal sites. Modeling results indicate that modification of the size of substituents at positions C7 and C10 of the taxane core influence the conformation of three key elements in microtubule lateral interactions (the M-loop, the S3 β-strand, and the H3 helix) that modulate the contacts between adjacent protofilaments. In addition, modifications of the substituents at position C2 slightly rearrange the ligand in the binding site, modifying the interaction of the C7 substituent with the M-loop.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2013

New Interfacial Microtubule Inhibitors of Marine Origin, PM050489/PM060184, with Potent Antitumor Activity and a Distinct Mechanism

Benet Pera; Isabel Barasoain; Areti Pantazopoulou; Ángeles Canales; Ruth Matesanz; Javier Rodríguez-Salarichs; Luis García-Fernández; Victoria Moneo; Jesús Jiménez-Barbero; Carlos M. Galmarini; Carmen Cuevas; Miguel A. Peñalva; J. Fernando Díaz

We have investigated the target and mechanism of action of a new family of cytotoxic small molecules of marine origin. PM050489 and its dechlorinated analogue PM060184 inhibit the growth of relevant cancer cell lines at subnanomolar concentrations. We found that they are highly potent microtubule inhibitors that impair mitosis with a distinct molecular mechanism. They bind with nanomolar affinity to unassembled αβ-tubulin dimers, and PM050489 binding is inhibited by known Vinca domain ligands. NMR TR-NOESY data indicated that a hydroxyl-containing analogue, PM060327, binds in an extended conformation, and STD results define its binding epitopes. Distinctly from vinblastine, these ligands only weakly induce tubulin self-association, in a manner more reminiscent of isohomohalichondrin B than of eribulin. PM050489, possibly acting like a hinge at the association interface between tubulin heterodimers, reshapes Mg(2+)-induced 42 S tubulin double rings into smaller 19 S single rings made of 7 ± 1 αβ-tubulin dimers. PM060184-resistant mutants of Aspergillus nidulans map to β-tubulin Asn100, suggesting a new binding site different from that of vinblastine at the associating β-tubulin end. Inhibition of assembly dynamics by a few ligand molecules at the microtubule plus end would explain the antitumor activity of these compounds, of which PM060184 is undergoing clinical trials.


Biochemistry | 2012

Cyclostreptin derivatives specifically target cellular tubulin and further map the paclitaxel site.

Enrique Calvo; Isabel Barasoain; Ruth Matesanz; Benet Pera; Emilio Camafeita; Oriol Pineda; Ernest Hamel; Christopher D. Vanderwal; Juan Antonio López; José Fernando Díaz

Cyclostreptin is the first microtubule-stabilizing agent whose mechanism of action was discovered to involve formation of a covalent bond with tubulin. Treatment of cells with cyclostreptin irreversibly stabilizes their microtubules because cyclostreptin forms a covalent bond to β-tubulin at either the T220 or the N228 residue, located at the microtubule pore or luminal taxoid binding site, respectively. Because of its unique mechanism of action, cyclostreptin overcomes P-glycoprotein-mediated multidrug resistance in tumor cells. We used a series of reactive cyclostreptin analogues, 6-chloroacetyl-cyclostreptin, 8-chloroacetyl-cyclostreptin, and [(14)C-acetyl]-8-acetyl-cyclostreptin, to characterize the cellular target of the compound and to map the binding site. The three analogues were cytotoxic and stabilized microtubules in both sensitive and multidrug resistant tumor cells. In both types of cells, we identified β-tubulin as the only or the predominantly labeled cellular protein, indicating that covalent binding to microtubules is sufficient to prevent drug efflux mediated by P-glycoprotein. 6-Chloroacetyl-cyclostreptin, 8-chloroacetyl-cyclostreptin, and 8-acetyl-cyclostreptin labeled both microtubules and unassembled tubulin at a single residue of the same tryptic peptide of β-tubulin as was labeled by cyclostreptin (219-LTTPTYGDLNHLVSATMSGVTTCLR-243), but labeling with the analogues occurred at different positions of the peptide. 8-Acetyl-cyclostreptin reacted with either T220 or N228, as did the natural product, while 8-chloroacetyl-cyclostreptin formed a cross-link to C241. Finally, 6-chloroacetyl-cyclostreptin reacted with any of the three residues, thus labeling the pathway for cyclostreptin-like compounds, leading from the pore where these compounds enter the microtubule to the luminal binding pocket.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Taxanes with high potency inducing tubulin assembly overcome tumoural cell resistances

Ruth Matesanz; Chiara Trigili; Javier Rodríguez-Salarichs; Ilaria Zanardi; Benet Pera; Aurora Nogales; Wei-Shuo Fang; Jesús Jiménez-Barbero; Ángeles Canales; Isabel Barasoain; Iwao Ojima; J. Fernando Díaz

We have found that four taxanes with chemical modifications at positions C10 and C13 were active against all types of taxane resistant cell lines, resistant by P-gp overexpression, by mutations in the β-tubulin binding site or by overexpression of the highly dynamic βIII-tubulin isotype. We have characterized the interaction of taxanes with high activity on chemotherapy resistant tumoural cells with microtubules, and also studied their cellular effects. The biochemical property enhanced in comparison with other taxanes is their potency at inducing tubulin assembly, despite the fact that their interactions with the microtubule binding sites (pore and luminal) are similar as studied by NMR and SAXS. A differential interaction with the S7-S9 loop (M-loop) is responsible for their enhanced assembly induction properties. The chemical changes in the structure also induce changes in the thermodynamic properties of the interaction, indicating a higher hydrophilicity and also explaining their properties on P-gp and βIII overexpressing cells and on mutant cells. The effect of the compounds on the microtubular network is different from those observed with the classical (docetaxel and paclitaxel) taxanes, inducing different bundling in cells with microtubules being very short, indicating a very fast nucleation effect and reflecting their high assembly induction power.


Nature Communications | 2017

THZ1 targeting CDK7 suppresses STAT transcriptional activity and sensitizes T-cell lymphomas to BCL2 inhibitors

Florencia Cayrol; Pannee Praditsuktavorn; Tharu Fernando; Nicholas Kwiatkowski; Rossella Marullo; M. Nieves Calvo-Vidal; Jude M. Phillip; Benet Pera; Shao Ning Yang; Kaipol Takpradit; Lidia Román; Marcello Gaudiano; Ramona Crescenzo; Jia Ruan; Giorgio Inghirami; Tinghu Zhang; Graciela Cremaschi; Nathanael S. Gray; Leandro Cerchietti

Peripheral T-cell lymphomas (PTCL) are aggressive diseases with poor response to chemotherapy and dismal survival. Identification of effective strategies to target PTCL biology represents an urgent need. Here we report that PTCL are sensitive to transcription-targeting drugs, and, in particular, to THZ1, a covalent inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinase 7 (CDK7). The STAT-signalling pathway is highly vulnerable to THZ1 even in PTCL cells that carry the activating STAT3 mutation Y640F. In mutant cells, CDK7 inhibition decreases STAT3 chromatin binding and expression of highly transcribed target genes like MYC, PIM1, MCL1, CD30, IL2RA, CDC25A and IL4R. In surviving cells, THZ1 decreases the expression of STAT-regulated anti-apoptotic BH3 family members MCL1 and BCL-XL sensitizing PTCL cells to BH3 mimetic drugs. Accordingly, the combination of THZ1 and the BH3 mimetic obatoclax improves lymphoma growth control in a primary PTCL ex vivo culture and in two STAT3-mutant PTCL xenografts, delineating a potential targeted agent-based therapeutic option for these patients.

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J. Fernando Díaz

Spanish National Research Council

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Isabel Barasoain

Spanish National Research Council

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Ruth Matesanz

Spanish National Research Council

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Javier Rodríguez-Salarichs

Spanish National Research Council

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José Fernando Díaz

Spanish National Research Council

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Chiara Trigili

Spanish National Research Council

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Enrique Calvo

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Ángeles Canales

Complutense University of Madrid

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