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Dive into the research topics where Bryan T. Mott is active.

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Featured researches published by Bryan T. Mott.


Cell Metabolism | 2016

Environment Impacts the Metabolic Dependencies of Ras-Driven Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

Shawn M. Davidson; Thales Papagiannakopoulos; Benjamin A. Olenchock; Julia E. Heyman; Mark A. Keibler; Alba Luengo; Matthew R. Bauer; Abhishek K. Jha; James P. O’Brien; Kerry A. Pierce; Dan Y. Gui; Lucas B. Sullivan; Thomas M. Wasylenko; Lakshmipriya Subbaraj; Christopher R. Chin; Gregory Stephanopolous; Bryan T. Mott; Tyler Jacks; Clary B. Clish; Matthew G. Vander Heiden

Cultured cells convert glucose to lactate, and glutamine is the major source of tricarboxylic acid (TCA)-cycle carbon, but whether the same metabolic phenotype is found in tumors is less studied. We infused mice with lung cancers with isotope-labeled glucose or glutamine and compared the fate of these nutrients in tumor and normal tissue. As expected, lung tumors exhibit increased lactate production from glucose. However, glutamine utilization by both lung tumors and normal lung was minimal, with lung tumors showing increased glucose contribution to the TCA cycle relative to normal lung tissue. Deletion of enzymes involved in glucose oxidation demonstrates that glucose carbon contribution to the TCA cycle is required for tumor formation. These data suggest that understanding nutrient utilization by tumors can predict metabolic dependencies of cancers in vivo. Furthermore, these data argue that the in vivo environment is an important determinant of the metabolic phenotype of cancer cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

High-throughput combinatorial screening identifies drugs that cooperate with ibrutinib to kill activated B-cell-like diffuse large B-cell lymphoma cells.

Lesley A. Mathews Griner; Rajarshi Guha; Paul Shinn; Ryan M. Young; Jonathan M. Keller; Dongbo Liu; Ian S. Goldlust; Adam Yasgar; Crystal McKnight; Matthew B. Boxer; Damien Y. Duveau; Jian-kang Jiang; Sam Michael; Tim Mierzwa; Wenwei Huang; Martin J. Walsh; Bryan T. Mott; Paresma R. Patel; William Leister; David J. Maloney; Christopher A. LeClair; Ganesha Rai; Ajit Jadhav; Brian D. Peyser; Christopher P. Austin; Scott E. Martin; Anton Simeonov; Marc Ferrer; Louis M. Staudt; Craig J. Thomas

Significance The treatment of cancer is highly reliant on drug combinations. Next-generation, targeted therapeutics are demonstrating interesting single-agent activities in clinical trials; however, the discovery of companion drugs through iterative clinical trial-and-error is not a tenable mechanism to prioritize clinically important combinations for these agents. Herein we describe the results of a large, high-throughput combination screen of the Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor ibrutinib versus a library of nearly 500 approved and investigational drugs. Multiple ibrutinib combinations were discovered through this study that can be prioritized for clinical examination. The clinical development of drug combinations is typically achieved through trial-and-error or via insight gained through a detailed molecular understanding of dysregulated signaling pathways in a specific cancer type. Unbiased small-molecule combination (matrix) screening represents a high-throughput means to explore hundreds and even thousands of drug–drug pairs for potential investigation and translation. Here, we describe a high-throughput screening platform capable of testing compounds in pairwise matrix blocks for the rapid and systematic identification of synergistic, additive, and antagonistic drug combinations. We use this platform to define potential therapeutic combinations for the activated B-cell–like subtype (ABC) of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). We identify drugs with synergy, additivity, and antagonism with the Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor ibrutinib, which targets the chronic active B-cell receptor signaling that characterizes ABC DLBCL. Ibrutinib interacted favorably with a wide range of compounds, including inhibitors of the PI3K-AKT-mammalian target of rapamycin signaling cascade, other B-cell receptor pathway inhibitors, Bcl-2 family inhibitors, and several components of chemotherapy that is the standard of care for DLBCL.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Quantitative high-throughput screening identifies 8-hydroxyquinolines as cell-active histone demethylase inhibitors.

Oliver N. King; Xuan Shirley Li; Masaaki Sakurai; Akane Kawamura; Nathan R. Rose; Stanley S. Ng; Amy Quinn; Ganesha Rai; Bryan T. Mott; Paul Beswick; Robert J. Klose; U. Oppermann; Ajit Jadhav; Tom D. Heightman; David J. Maloney; Christopher J. Schofield; Anton Simeonov

BACKGROUND Small molecule modulators of epigenetic processes are currently sought as basic probes for biochemical mechanisms, and as starting points for development of therapeutic agents. N(ε)-Methylation of lysine residues on histone tails is one of a number of post-translational modifications that together enable transcriptional regulation. Histone lysine demethylases antagonize the action of histone methyltransferases in a site- and methylation state-specific manner. N(ε)-Methyllysine demethylases that use 2-oxoglutarate as co-factor are associated with diverse human diseases, including cancer, inflammation and X-linked mental retardation; they are proposed as targets for the therapeutic modulation of transcription. There are few reports on the identification of templates that are amenable to development as potent inhibitors in vivo and large diverse collections have yet to be exploited for the discovery of demethylase inhibitors. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS High-throughput screening of a ∼236,000-member collection of diverse molecules arrayed as dilution series was used to identify inhibitors of the JMJD2 (KDM4) family of 2-oxoglutarate-dependent histone demethylases. Initial screening hits were prioritized by a combination of cheminformatics, counterscreening using a coupled assay enzyme, and orthogonal confirmatory detection of inhibition by mass spectrometric assays. Follow-up studies were carried out on one of the series identified, 8-hydroxyquinolines, which were shown by crystallographic analyses to inhibit by binding to the active site Fe(II) and to modulate demethylation at the H3K9 locus in a cell-based assay. CONCLUSIONS These studies demonstrate that diverse compound screening can yield novel inhibitors of 2OG dependent histone demethylases and provide starting points for the development of potent and selective agents to interrogate epigenetic regulation.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Quantitative Analyses of Aggregation, Autofluorescence, and Reactivity Artifacts in a Screen for Inhibitors of a Thiol Protease

Ajit Jadhav; Rafaela Salgado Ferreira; Carleen Klumpp; Bryan T. Mott; Christopher P. Austin; James Inglese; Craig J. Thomas; David J. Maloney; Brian K. Shoichet; Anton Simeonov

The perceived and actual burden of false positives in high-throughput screening has received considerable attention; however, few studies exist on the contributions of distinct mechanisms of nonspecific effects like chemical reactivity, assay signal interference, and colloidal aggregation. Here, we analyze the outcome of a screen of 197861 diverse compounds in a concentration-response format against the cysteine protease cruzain, a target expected to be particularly sensitive to reactive compounds, and using an assay format with light detection in the short-wavelength region where significant compound autofluorescence is typically encountered. Approximately 1.9% of all compounds screened were detergent-sensitive inhibitors. The contribution from autofluorescence and compounds bearing reactive functionalities was dramatically lower: of all hits, only 1.8% were autofluorescent and 1.5% contained reactive or undesired functional groups. The distribution of false positives was relatively constant across library sources. The simple step of including detergent in the assay buffer suppressed the nonspecific effect of approximately 93% of the original hits.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Complementarity between a docking and a high-throughput screen in discovering new cruzain inhibitors.

Rafaela Salgado Ferreira; Anton Simeonov; Ajit Jadhav; Oliv Eidam; Bryan T. Mott; Michael J. Keiser; James H. McKerrow; David J. Maloney; John J. Irwin; Brian K. Shoichet

Virtual and high-throughput screens (HTS) should have complementary strengths and weaknesses, but studies that prospectively and comprehensively compare them are rare. We undertook a parallel docking and HTS screen of 197861 compounds against cruzain, a thiol protease target for Chagas disease, looking for reversible, competitive inhibitors. On workup, 99% of the hits were eliminated as false positives, yielding 146 well-behaved, competitive ligands. These fell into five chemotypes: two were prioritized by scoring among the top 0.1% of the docking-ranked library, two were prioritized by behavior in the HTS and by clustering, and one chemotype was prioritized by both approaches. Determination of an inhibitor/cruzain crystal structure and comparison of the high-scoring docking hits to experiment illuminated the origins of docking false-negatives and false-positives. Prioritizing molecules that are both predicted by docking and are HTS-active yields well-behaved molecules, relatively unobscured by the false-positives to which both techniques are individually prone.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Thiazole, oxadiazole, and carboxamide derivatives of artemisinin are highly selective and potent inhibitors of Toxoplasma gondii.

Christopher P. Hencken; Lorraine Jones-Brando; Claudia Bordón; Remo Stohler; Bryan T. Mott; Robert H. Yolken; Gary H. Posner; Lauren E. Woodard

We have prepared 23 new dehydroartemisinin (DART) trioxane derivatives (11 thiazoles, 2 oxadiazoles, and 10 carboxamides) and have screened them for in vitro activity in the Toxoplasma lytic cycle. Fifteen (65%) of the derivatives were noncytotoxic to host cells (TD(50) > or = 320 microM). Eight thiazole derivatives and two carboxamide derivatives displayed effective inhibition of Toxoplasma growth (IC(50) = 0.25-0.42 microM), comparable in potency to artemether (IC(50) = 0.31 microM) and >100 times more inhibitory than the currently employed front-line drug trimethoprim (IC(50) = 46 microM). The thiazoles as a group were more effective than the other derivatives at inhibiting growth of extracellular as well as intracellular parasites. Unexpectedly, two thiazole trioxanes (5 and 6) were parasiticidal; both inhibited parasite replication irreversibly after parasite exposure to 10 microM of drug for 24 h, whereas the standard trioxane drugs artemisinin and artemether were not parasiticidal. Some of the new derivatives of artemisinin described here represent effective anti-Toxoplasma trioxanes as well as molecular probes for elucidating the mechanism of action of the DART class of artemisinin derivatives.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Evaluation of substituted 6-arylquinazolin-4-amines as potent and selective inhibitors of cdc2-like kinases (Clk).

Bryan T. Mott; Cordelle Tanega; Min Shen; David J. Maloney; Paul Shinn; William Leister; Juan J. Marugan; James Inglese; Christopher P. Austin; Tom Misteli; Douglas S. Auld; Craig J. Thomas

A series of substituted 6-arylquinazolin-4-amines were prepared and analyzed as inhibitors of Clk4. Synthesis, structure-activity relationships and the selectivity of a potent analogue against a panel of 402 kinases are presented. Inhibition of Clk4 by these agents at varied concentrations of assay substrates (ATP and receptor peptide) highly suggests that this chemotype is an ATP competitive inhibitor. Molecular docking provides further evidence that inhibition is the result of binding at the kinase hinge region. Selected compounds represent novel tools capable of potent and selective inhibition of Clk1, Clk4, and Dyrk1A.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Potent and selective small molecule inhibitors of specific isoforms of Cdc2-like kinases (Clk) and dual specificity tyrosine-phosphorylation-regulated kinases (Dyrk).

Andrew S. Rosenthal; Cordelle Tanega; Min Shen; Bryan T. Mott; James M. Bougie; Dac-Trung Nguyen; Tom Misteli; Douglas S. Auld; David J. Maloney; Craig J. Thomas

Continued examination of substituted 6-arylquinazolin-4-amines as Clk4 inhibitors resulted in selective inhibitors of Clk1, Clk4, Dyrk1A and Dyrk1B. Several of the most potent inhibitors were validated as being highly selective within a comprehensive kinome scan.


PLOS ONE | 2011

An Artemisinin-Derived Dimer Has Highly Potent Anti-Cytomegalovirus (CMV) and Anti-Cancer Activities

Ran He; Bryan T. Mott; Andrew S. Rosenthal; Douglas T. Genna; Gary H. Posner; Ravit Arav-Boger

We recently reported that two artemisinin-derived dimers (dimer primary alcohol 606 and dimer sulfone 4-carbamate 832-4) are significantly more potent in inhibiting human cytomegalovirus (CMV) replication than artemisinin-derived monomers. In our continued evaluation of the activities of artemisinins in CMV inhibition, twelve artemisinin-derived dimers and five artemisinin-derived monomers were used. Dimers as a group were found to be potent inhibitors of CMV replication. Comparison of CMV inhibition and the slope parameter of dimers and monomers suggest that dimers are distinct in their anti-CMV activities. A deoxy dimer (574), lacking the endoperoxide bridge, did not have any effect on CMV replication, suggesting a role for the endoperoxide bridge in CMV inhibition. Differences in anti-CMV activity were observed among three structural analogs of dimer sulfone 4-carbamate 832-4 indicating that the exact placement and oxidation state of the sulfur atom may contribute to its anti-CMV activity. Of all tested dimers, artemisinin-derived diphenyl phosphate dimer 838 proved to be the most potent inhibitor of CMV replication, with a selectivity index of approximately 1500, compared to our previously reported dimer sulfone 4-carbamate 832-4 with a selectivity index of about 900. Diphenyl phosphate dimer 838 was highly active against a Ganciclovir-resistant CMV strain and was also the most active dimer in inhibition of cancer cell growth. Thus, diphenyl phosphate dimer 838 may represent a lead for development of a highly potent and safe anti-CMV compound.


Scientific Reports | 2015

High-throughput matrix screening identifies synergistic and antagonistic antimalarial drug combinations

Bryan T. Mott; Richard T. Eastman; Rajarshi Guha; Katy S. Sherlach; Amila Siriwardana; Paul Shinn; Crystal McKnight; Sam Michael; Norinne Lacerda-Queiroz; Paresma Patel; Pwint Khine; Hongmao Sun; Monica Kasbekar; Nima Aghdam; Shaun D. Fontaine; Dongbo Liu; Tim Mierzwa; Lesley Mathews-Griner; Marc Ferrer; Adam R. Renslo; James Inglese; Jing Yuan; Paul D. Roepe; Xin-Zhuan Su; Craig J. Thomas

Drug resistance in Plasmodium parasites is a constant threat. Novel therapeutics, especially new drug combinations, must be identified at a faster rate. In response to the urgent need for new antimalarial drug combinations we screened a large collection of approved and investigational drugs, tested 13,910 drug pairs, and identified many promising antimalarial drug combinations. The activity of known antimalarial drug regimens was confirmed and a myriad of new classes of positively interacting drug pairings were discovered. Network and clustering analyses reinforced established mechanistic relationships for known drug combinations and identified several novel mechanistic hypotheses. From eleven screens comprising >4,600 combinations per parasite strain (including duplicates) we further investigated interactions between approved antimalarials, calcium homeostasis modulators, and inhibitors of phosphatidylinositide 3-kinases (PI3K) and the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR). These studies highlight important targets and pathways and provide promising leads for clinically actionable antimalarial therapy.

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David J. Maloney

National Institutes of Health

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Ajit Jadhav

National Institutes of Health

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Anton Simeonov

National Institutes of Health

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Ganesha Rai

National Institutes of Health

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Akane Kawamura

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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Amy Quinn

National Institutes of Health

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Craig J. Thomas

National Institutes of Health

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Thomas S. Dexheimer

National Institutes of Health

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