Charles G. Starr
Tulane University
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Featured researches published by Charles G. Starr.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015
Jing He; Charles G. Starr; William C. Wimley
The rapid rise in morbidity and mortality from drug-resistant pathogenic bacteria has generated elevated interest in combination therapy using antimicrobial agents. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are a candidate drug class to advance the development of combination therapies. Although the literature is ambiguous, the generic membrane disrupting activity of AMPs could enable them to synergize with conventional small molecule antibiotics by increasing access to the cell and by triggering membrane damage mediators. We used a novel assay to measure interactions, expressed as fractional inhibitory concentration (FIC), between four conventional antibiotics in combination with four well-characterized, membrane permeabilizing AMPs, against three species of Gram negative and Gram positive bacteria, giving 40 total pair-wise measurements of FIC with statistical uncertainties. We chose a set of AMPs that are known to dramatically disrupt the membranes of both Gram negative and Gram positive bacteria. Yet none of the membrane permeabilizing antimicrobial peptides interacted synergistically with any of the conventional antibiotic drugs in any organism. Large-scale membrane disruption and permeabilization by AMPs is not sufficient to drive them to act synergistically with chemical antibiotics in either Gram negative or Gram positive microbes.
Journal of Virology | 2017
Jing He; Lilia I. Melnik; Alexander Komin; Gregory Wiedman; Taylor Fuselier; Cameron F. Morris; Charles G. Starr; Peter C. Searson; William R. Gallaher; Kalina Hristova; Robert F. Garry; William C. Wimley
ABSTRACT The Ebola virus (EBOV) genome encodes a partly conserved 40-residue nonstructural polypeptide, called the delta peptide, that is produced in abundance during Ebola virus disease (EVD). The function of the delta peptide is unknown, but sequence analysis has suggested that delta peptide could be a viroporin, belonging to a diverse family of membrane-permeabilizing small polypeptides involved in replication and pathogenesis of numerous viruses. Full-length and conserved C-terminal delta peptide fragments permeabilize the plasma membranes of nucleated cells of rodent, dog, monkey, and human origin; increase ion permeability across confluent cell monolayers; and permeabilize synthetic lipid bilayers. Permeabilization activity is completely dependent on the disulfide bond between the two conserved cysteines. The conserved C-terminal portion of the peptide is biochemically stable in human serum, and most serum-stable fragments have full activity. Taken together, the evidence strongly suggests that Ebola virus delta peptide is a viroporin and that it may be a novel, targetable aspect of Ebola virus disease pathology. IMPORTANCE During the unparalleled West African outbreak of Ebola virus disease (EVD) that began in late 2013, the lack of effective countermeasures resulted in chains of serial infection and a high mortality rate among infected patients. A better understanding of disease pathology is desperately needed to develop better countermeasures. We show here that the Ebola virus delta peptide, a conserved nonstructural protein produced in large quantities by infected cells, has the characteristics of a viroporin. This information suggests a critical role for the delta peptide in Ebola virus disease pathology and as a possible target for novel countermeasures.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2017
Charles G. Starr; William C. Wimley
Well-studied and promising antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), with potent bactericidal activity, in vitro, have yet to have a significant impact in human medicine beyond topical applications. We previously showed that interactions of AMPs with concentrated human erythrocytes inhibit many of them, and suggested that screens and assays should be done in their presence to mimic host cell inhibition. Here, we use AMPs to characterize the activity of proteases that are associated with human erythrocytes. The representative AMPs, ARVA and indolicidin, are degraded significantly during incubation with dilute, washed erythrocytes and yield a variety of degradation products, suggesting significant exopeptidase activity. Comparison of these fragments with those obtained from incubation with serum shows that the proteolytic activity associated with cells yields unique products that are not explained by residual serum proteases. By separately testing the membrane and cytosolic fractions, we show that erythrocyte proteolytic activity is found only in the cytosol. Finally, we incubated a diverse cross-section of natural and synthetic linear AMPs with human erythrocyte cytosolic extracts and observed degradation of all of them. These results show that, in addition to cell binding, proteolysis can also contribute significantly to host cell inhibition of AMPs in vitro and possibly also in vivo.
Peptides | 2018
Charles G. Starr; Jerome L. Maderdrut; Jing He; David H. Coy; William C. Wimley
HighlightsPACAP38 has broad spectrum antimicrobial activity.Full length agonist and antagonist variants retain antimicrobial activity.Receptor activation and antimicrobial activity can be independently manipulated.Antimicrobial activity results from bacterial membrane permeabilization. ABSTRACT Pituitary adenylate cyclase‐activating polypeptide (PACAP) is a naturally occurring cationic peptide with potent immunosuppressant and cytoprotective activities. We now show that full length PACAP38 and to a lesser extent, the truncated form PACAP27, and the closely related vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and secretin had antimicrobial activity against the Gram‐negative bacteria Escherichia coli in the radial diffusion assay. PACAP38 was more potent than either the bovine neutrophil antimicrobial peptide indolicidin or the synthetic antimicrobial peptide ARVA against E. coli. PACAP38 also had activity against the Gram‐positive bacteria Staphylococcus aureus in the same assay with comparable potency to indolicidin and ARVA. In the more stringent broth dilution assay, PACAP38 had moderate sterilizing activity against E. coli, and potent sterilizing activity against the Gram‐negative bacteria Pseudomonas aeruginosa. PACAP27, VIP and secretin were much less active than PACAP38 in this assay. PACAP38 also had some activity against the Gram‐positive bacteria Bacillus cereus in the broth dilution assay. Many exopeptidase‐resistant analogs of PACAP38, including both receptor agonists and antagonists, had antimicrobial activities equal to, or better than PACAP38, in both assays. PACAP38 made the membranes of E. coli permeable to SYTOX Green, suggesting a classical membrane lytic mechanism. These data suggest that analogs of PACPAP38 with a wide range of useful biological activities can be made by judicious substitutions in the sequence.
Biophysical Journal | 2018
Charles H. Chen; Charles G. Starr; Shantanu Guha; Jochen Bürck; Anne S. Ulrich; William C. Wimley; Martin B. Ulmschneider
has shown that the drugs’ physico-chemical profile, rather than hydrophobicity alone, dictate their bilayer-modifying potency. As drugs traverse varying environments, i.e. pH differences in segments of the gastro intestinal system, the ensuing changes in drug charge may alter bilayer partitioning, such that a drug’s pKa and the local pH (which determine the net drug charge) may affect its interactions with cell membranes (and proteins). We explore this question using gramicidin channels as reporters to quantify amphiphile effects on lipid bilayer properties. We previously reported that amiodarone and troglitazone alter bilayer elasticity at their clinical concentrations. To understand how pH affects drug interactions with the lipid bilayer, we examine changes in bilayer-modifying potency of a group of drugs with varying pKa, including amiodarone and troglitazone. As we vary their charge by changing pH to below and above their respective pKa, we find that increasing the charged population results in increased bilayermodifying potency even though the bilayer partition coefficients of charged compounds tend to be less than their neutral counterparts. The increased bilayer-modifying potency of charged compounds may be due to altered localization of charged compounds at the interface. We conclude that drug interactions with lipid bilayer, and their effect on bilayer properties, are highly dependent on its environment.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Aram J. Krauson; O. Morgan Hall; Taylor Fuselier; Charles G. Starr; W. Berkeley Kauffman; William C. Wimley
ACS Chemical Biology | 2016
Charles G. Starr; Jing He; William C. Wimley
Biophysical Journal | 2017
Charles G. Starr; Jing He; William C. Wimley
Biophysical Journal | 2018
Charles G. Starr; William C. Wimley
Biophysical Journal | 2017
Jing He; Lilia I. Melnik; Alexander Komin; Charles G. Starr; Taylor Fuselier; Gregory Wiedman; Cameron F. Morris; Yilin Wang; Kalina Hristova; William R. Gallaher; Robert F. Garry; William C. Wimley