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Dive into the research topics where Brian Edward Vash is active.

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Featured researches published by Brian Edward Vash.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Human HDAC isoform selectivity achieved via exploitation of the acetate release channel with structurally unique small molecule inhibitors.

Lewis Whitehead; Markus Dobler; Branko Radetich; Peter Atadja; Tavina Claiborne; Jonathan E. Grob; Andrew McRiner; Margaret R. Pancost; Anup Patnaik; Wenlin Shao; Michael Shultz; Ritesh Tichkule; Ruben Tommasi; Brian Edward Vash; Ping Wang; Travis Stams

Herein we report the discovery of a family of novel yet simple, amino-acid derived class I HDAC inhibitors that demonstrate isoform selectivity via access to the internal acetate release channel. Isoform selectivity criteria is discussed on the basis of X-ray crystallography and molecular modeling of these novel inhibitors bound to HDAC8, potentially revealing insights into the mechanism of enzymatic function through novel structural features revealed at the atomic level.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Investigation of Functionally Liver Selective Glucokinase Activators for the Treatment of Type 2 Diabetes

Gregory Raymond Bebernitz; Valerie Beaulieu; Bethany A. Dale; Richard Deacon; Alokesh Duttaroy; Jiaping Gao; Melissa S. Grondine; Ramesh Chandra Gupta; Mesut Kakmak; Michael Kavana; Louise Kirman; Jinsheng Liang; Wieslawa M. Maniara; Siralee Munshi; Sunil Sadanand Nadkarni; Herbert F. Schuster; Travis Stams; Irene St. Denny; Paul Taslimi; Brian Edward Vash; Shari L. Caplan

Type 2 diabetes is a polygenic disease which afflicts nearly 200 million people worldwide and is expected to increase to near epidemic levels over the next 10-15 years. Glucokinase (GK) activators are currently under investigation by a number of pharmaceutical companies with only a few reaching early clinical evaluation. A GK activator has the promise of potentially affecting both the beta-cells of the pancreas, by improving glucose sensitive insulin secretion, as well as the liver, by reducing uncontrolled glucose output and restoring post-prandial glucose uptake and storage as glycogen. Herein, we report our efforts on a sulfonamide chemotype with the aim to generate liver selective GK activators which culminated in the discovery of 3-cyclopentyl-N-(5-methoxy-thiazolo[5,4-b]pyridin-2-yl)-2-[4-(4-methyl-piperazine-1-sulfonyl)-phenyl]-propionamide (17c). This compound activated the GK enzyme (alphaK(a) = 39 nM) in vitro at low nanomolar concentrations and significantly reduced glucose levels during an oral glucose tolerance test in normal mice.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2015

FOCUS — Development of a Global Communication and Modeling Platform for Applied and Computational Medicinal Chemists

Nikolaus Stiefl; Peter Gedeck; Donovan Chin; Peter W. Hunt; Mika K. Lindvall; Katrin Spiegel; Clayton Springer; Scott Biller; Christoph L. Buenemann; Takanori Kanazawa; Mitsunori Kato; Richard Lewis; Eric J. Martin; Valery R. Polyakov; Ruben Tommasi; John H. Van Drie; Brian Edward Vash; Lewis Whitehead; Yongjin Xu; Ruben Abagyan; Eugene Raush; Maxim Totrov

Communication of data and ideas within a medicinal chemistry project on a global as well as local level is a crucial aspect in the drug design cycle. Over a time frame of eight years, we built and optimized FOCUS, a platform to produce, visualize, and share information on various aspects of a drug discovery project such as cheminformatics, data analysis, structural information, and design. FOCUS is tightly integrated with internal services that involve-among others-data retrieval systems and in-silico models and provides easy access to automated modeling procedures such as pharmacophore searches, R-group analysis, and similarity searches. In addition, an interactive 3D editor was developed to assist users in the generation and docking of close analogues of a known lead. In this paper, we will specifically concentrate on issues we faced during development, deployment, and maintenance of the software and how we continually adapted the software in order to improve usability. We will provide usage examples to highlight the functionality as well as limitations of FOCUS at the various stages of the development process. We aim to make the discussion as independent of the software platform as possible, so that our experiences can be of more general value to the drug discovery community.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Acylated-acyl carrier protein stabilizes the Pseudomonas aeruginosa WaaP lipopolysaccharide heptose kinase

Naomi N. K. Kreamer; Rajiv Chopra; Ruth E. Caughlan; Doriano Fabbro; Eric Fang; Patricia Gee; Ian Hunt; Min Li; Barbara C. Leon; Lionel Muller; Brian Edward Vash; Angela L. Woods; Travis Stams; Charles R. Dean; Tsuyoshi Uehara

Phosphorylation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is important for maintaining outer membrane integrity and intrinsic antibiotic resistance. We solved the crystal structure of the LPS heptose kinase WaaP, which is essential for growth of P. aeruginosa. WaaP was structurally similar to eukaryotic protein kinases and, intriguingly, was complexed with acylated-acyl carrier protein (acyl-ACP). WaaP produced by in vitro transcription-translation was insoluble unless acyl-ACP was present. WaaP variants designed to perturb the acyl-ACP interaction were less stable in cells and exhibited reduced kinase function. Mass spectrometry identified myristyl-ACP as the likely physiological binding partner for WaaP in P. aeruginosa. Together, these results demonstrate that acyl-ACP is required for WaaP protein solubility and kinase function. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report describing acyl-ACP in the role of a cofactor necessary for the production and stability of a protein partner.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Author Correction: Acylated-acyl carrier protein stabilizes the Pseudomonas aeruginosa WaaP lipopolysaccharide heptose kinase

Naomi N. K. Kreamer; Rajiv Chopra; Ruth E. Caughlan; Doriano Fabbro; Eric Fang; Patricia Gee; Ian Hunt; Min Li; Barbara C. Leon; Lionel Muller; Brian Edward Vash; Angela L. Woods; Travis Stams; Charles R. Dean; Tsuyoshi Uehara

A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has not been fixed in the paper.


Archive | 2014

Regulatable chimeric antigen receptor

Jennifer Brogdon; Boris Engels; David Glass; Brian Granda; John Hastewell; Andreas Loew; Joan Mannick; Michael C. Milone; Leon O. Murphy; William R. Sellers; Huijuan Song; Brian Edward Vash; Jan Weiler; Qilong Wu; Li Zhou


Archive | 2010

Universal fibronectin type iii bottom-side binding domain libraries

Andreas Loew; Brian Edward Vash


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2009

The structure of the BIR3 domain of cIAP1 in complex with the N-terminal peptides of SMAC and caspase-9.

Raviraj Kulathila; Brian Edward Vash; David Sage; Susan Cornell-Kennon; Kirk Wright; James Koehn; Travis Stams; Kirk Clark; Allen C. Price


Archive | 2015

HSA-GDF-15 FUSION POLYPEPTIDE AND USE THEREOF

Rajiv Chopra; Norio Hamamatsu; Ryan S. Streeper; Brian Edward Vash


Archive | 2017

Multispecific antibody molecules comprising lambda and kappa light chains

Andreas Loew; Brian Edward Vash; Stephanie J. Maiocco

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