Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Christine Lukacs is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Christine Lukacs.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Activation of the p53 pathway by small-molecule-induced MDM2 and MDMX dimerization

Bradford Graves; Thelma Thompson; Mingxuan Xia; Cheryl A. Janson; Christine Lukacs; Dayanand Deo; Paola Di Lello; David W. Fry; Colin Garvie; Kuo-Sen Huang; Lin Gao; Christian Tovar; Allen John Lovey; Jutta Wanner; Lyubomir T. Vassilev

Activation of p53 tumor suppressor by antagonizing its negative regulator murine double minute (MDM)2 has been considered an attractive strategy for cancer therapy and several classes of p53-MDM2 binding inhibitors have been developed. However, these compounds do not inhibit the p53-MDMX interaction, and their effectiveness can be compromised in tumors overexpressing MDMX. Here, we identify small molecules that potently block p53 binding with both MDM2 and MDMX by inhibitor-driven homo- and/or heterodimerization of MDM2 and MDMX proteins. Structural studies revealed that the inhibitors bind into and occlude the p53 pockets of MDM2 and MDMX by inducing the formation of dimeric protein complexes kept together by a dimeric small-molecule core. This mode of action effectively stabilized p53 and activated p53 signaling in cancer cells, leading to cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. Dual MDM2/MDMX antagonists restored p53 apoptotic activity in the presence of high levels of MDMX and may offer a more effective therapeutic modality for MDMX-overexpressing cancers.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2000

Understanding the immutability of restriction enzymes: crystal structure of BglII and its DNA substrate at 1.5 A resolution.

Christine Lukacs; Rebecca Kucera; Ira Schildkraut; Aneel K. Aggarwal

Restriction endonucleases are remarkably resilient to alterations in their DNA binding specificity. To understand the basis of this immutability, we have determined the crystal structure of endonuclease BglII bound to its recognition sequence (AGATCT), at 1.5 Å resolution. We compare the structure of BglII to endonuclease BamHI, which recognizes a closely related DNA site (GGATCC). We show that both enzymes share a similar α/β core, but in BglII, the core is augmented by a β-sandwich domain that encircles the DNA to provide extra specificity. Remarkably, the DNA is contorted differently in the two structures, leading to different protein–DNA contacts for even the common base pairs. Furthermore, the BglII active site contains a glutamine in place of the glutamate at the general base position in BamHI, and only a single metal is found coordinated to the putative nucleophilic water and the phosphate oxygens. This surprising diversity in structures shows that different strategies can be successful in achieving site-specific recognition and catalysis in restriction endonucleases.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Design and synthesis of novel allosteric MEK inhibitor CH4987655 as an orally available anticancer agent.

Yoshiaki Isshiki; Yasunori Kohchi; Hitoshi Iikura; Yasuaki Matsubara; Kohsuke Asoh; Takeshi Murata; Masami Kohchi; Eisaku Mizuguchi; Shinji Tsujii; Kazuo Hattori; Takaaki Miura; Yasushi Yoshimura; Satoshi Aida; Masanori Miwa; Ryoichi Saitoh; Naoaki Murao; Hisafumi Okabe; Charles Belunis; Cheryl Janson; Christine Lukacs; Verena Schück; Nobuo Shimma

The MAP kinase pathway is one of the most important pathways involved in cell proliferation and differentiation, and its components are promising targets for antitumor drugs. Design and synthesis of a novel MEK inhibitor, based on the 3D-structural information of the target enzyme, and then multidimensional optimization including metabolic stability, physicochemical properties and safety profiles were effectively performed and led to the identification of a clinical candidate for an orally available potent MEK inhibitor, CH4987655, possessing a unique 3-oxo-oxazinane ring structure at the 5-position of the benzamide core structure. CH4987655 exhibits slow dissociation from the MEK enzyme, remarkable in vivo antitumor efficacy both in mono- and combination therapy, desirable metabolic stability, and insignificant MEK inhibition in mouse brain, implying few CNS-related side effects in human. An excellent PK profile and clear target inhibition in PBMC were demonstrated in a healthy volunteer clinical study.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

High-resolution crystal structure of a hepatitis B virus replication inhibitor bound to the viral core protein.

Klaus Klumpp; Angela M. Lam; Christine Lukacs; Robert L. Vogel; Suping Ren; Christine Espiritu; Ruth Baydo; Kateri Atkins; Jan Abendroth; Guochun Liao; Andrey Efimov; George D. Hartman; Osvaldo A. Flores

Significance A high-resolution structure was obtained for a drug candidate achieving pharmacological activity by inducing and stabilizing protein–protein interaction, a mechanism difficult to study in structural biology. We found that with poorly diffracting protein crystals, a protein stabilizing compound can improve crystal quality and enable the acquisition of a high-resolution structure. It also becomes apparent from this structure how improvements in pharmacologic potency can be achieved by improving protein–protein interaction stabilization and clear avenues for compound optimization are apparent from the data. The binding site observed in crystallography was biologically validated by mutational analysis, which also provides for the first time, to our knowledge, an understanding of a pathway by which viable, drug resistant virus variants may evolve against this drug class. The hepatitis B virus (HBV) core protein is essential for HBV replication and an important target for antiviral drug discovery. We report the first, to our knowledge, high-resolution crystal structure of an antiviral compound bound to the HBV core protein. The compound NVR-010–001-E2 can induce assembly of the HBV core wild-type and Y132A mutant proteins and thermostabilize the proteins with a Tm increase of more than 10 °C. NVR-010–001-E2 binds at the dimer–dimer interface of the core proteins, forms a new interaction surface promoting protein–protein interaction, induces protein assembly, and increases stability. The impact of naturally occurring core protein mutations on antiviral activity correlates with NVR-010–001-E2 binding interactions determined by crystallography. The crystal structure provides understanding of a drug efficacy mechanism related to the induction and stabilization of protein–protein interactions and enables structure-guided design to improve antiviral potency and drug-like properties.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Deconstruction of a Nutlin: Dissecting the Binding Determinants of a Potent Protein–Protein Interaction Inhibitor

David C. Fry; Charles Wartchow; Bradford Graves; Cheryl A. Janson; Christine Lukacs; Ursula Kammlott; Charles Belunis; Stefan Palme; Christian Klein; Binh Thanh Vu

Protein-protein interaction (PPI) systems represent a rich potential source of targets for drug discovery, but historically have proven to be difficult, particularly in the lead identification stage. Application of the fragment-based approach may help toward success with this target class. To provide an example toward understanding the potential issues associated with such an application, we have deconstructed one of the best established protein-protein inhibitors, the Nutlin series that inhibits the interaction between MDM2 and p53, into fragments, and surveyed the resulting binding properties using heteronuclear single quantum coherence nuclear magnetic resonance (HSQC NMR), surface plasmon resonance (SPR), and X-ray crystallography. We report the relative contributions toward binding affinity for each of the key substituents of the Nutlin molecule and show that this series could hypothetically have been discovered via a fragment approach. We find that the smallest fragment of Nutlin that retains binding accesses two subpockets of MDM2 and has a molecular weight at the high end of the range that normally defines fragments.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Pyrido[2,3-d]pyrimidines: Discovery and preliminary SAR of a novel series of DYRK1B and DYRK1A inhibitors.

Kevin William Anderson; Yi Chen; Zhi Chen; Romyr Dominique; Kelli Glenn; Yang He; Cheryl Janson; Kin-Chun Luk; Christine Lukacs; Ann Polonskaia; Qi Qiao; Aruna Railkar; Pamela Loreen Rossman; Hongmao Sun; Qing Xiang; Masha Vilenchik; Peter Michael Wovkulich; Xiaolei Zhang

DYRK1B is a kinase over-expressed in certain cancer cells (including colon, ovarian, pancreatic, etc.). Recent publications have demonstrated inhibition of DYRK1B could be an attractive target for cancer therapy. From a data-mining effort, the team has discovered analogues of pyrido[2,3-d]pyrimidines as potent enantio-selective inhibitors of DYRK1B. Cells treated with a tool compound from this series showed the same cellular effects as down regulation of DYRK1B with siRNA. Such effects are consistent with the proposed mechanism of action. Progress of the SAR study is presented.


Arthritis Research & Therapy | 2013

Selective inhibition of spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK) with a novel orally bioavailable small molecule inhibitor, RO9021, impinges on various innate and adaptive immune responses: implications for SYK inhibitors in autoimmune disease therapy

Cheng Liao; Jonathan Hsu; Yong Kim; Dong-Qing Hu; Daigen Xu; Jun Zhang; Achal Pashine; John Menke; Toni Whittard; Natasha Romero; Theresa Truitt; Michelle Slade; Christine Lukacs; Johannes C. Hermann; Mingyan Zhou; Matthew C. Lucas; Satwant Narula; Julie DeMartino; Seng-Lai Tan

IntroductionSpleen tyrosine kinase (SYK) is a key integrator of intracellular signals triggered by activated immunoreceptors, including Bcell receptors (BCR) and Fc receptors, which are important for the development and function of lymphoid cells. Given the clinical efficacy of Bcell depletion in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis, pharmacological modulation of Bcells using orally active small molecules that selectively target SYK presents an attractive alternative therapeutic strategy.MethodsA SYK inhibitor was developed and assayed in various in vitro systems and in the mouse model of collagen-induced arthritis (mCIA).ResultsA novel ATP-competitive inhibitor of SYK, 6-[(1R,2S)-2-Amino-cyclohexylamino]-4-(5,6-dimethyl-pyridin-2-ylamino)-pyridazine-3-carboxylic acid amide, designated RO9021, with an adequate kinase selectivity profile and oral bioavailability, was developed. In addition to suppression of BCR signaling in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and whole blood, FcγR signaling in human monocytes, and FcϵR signaling in human mast cells, RO9021 blocked osteoclastogenesis from mouse bone marrow macrophages in vitro. Interestingly, Toll-like Receptor (TLR) 9 signaling in human Bcells was inhibited by RO9021, resulting in decreased levels of plasmablasts, immunoglobulin (Ig) M and IgG upon B-cell differentiation. RO9021 also potently inhibited type I interferon production by human plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) upon TLR9 activation. This effect is specific to TLR9 as RO9021 did not inhibit TLR4- or JAK-STAT-mediated signaling. Finally, oral administration of RO9021 inhibited arthritis progression in the mCIA model, with observable pharmacokinetics (PK)-pharmacodynamic (PD) correlation.ConclusionsInhibition of SYK kinase activity impinges on various innate and adaptive immune responses. RO9021 could serve as a starting point for the development of selective SYK inhibitors for the treatment of inflammation-related and autoimmune-related disorders.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

3,5,6-TRISUBSTITUTED NAPHTHOSTYRILS AS CDK2 INHIBITORS.

Jin-Jun Liu; Apostolos Dermatakis; Christine Lukacs; Fred Konzelmann; Yi Chen; Ursula Kammlott; Wanda DePinto; Hong Yang; Xuefeng Yin; Yingsi Chen; Andy Schutt; Mary Ellen Simcox; Kin-Chun Luk

A novel class of 3,5,6-trisubstituted naphthostyril analogues was designed and synthesized to study the structure-activity relationship for inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2). These compounds, particularly molecules with side-chain modifications providing additional hydrogen bonding capability, were demonstrated to be potent CDK2 inhibitors with cellular activities consistent with CDK2 inhibition. These molecules inhibited tumor cell proliferation and G1-S and G2-M cell-cycle progression in vitro. The X-ray crystal structure of a 2-aminoethyleneamine derivative bound to CDK2, refined to 2.5A resolution, is presented.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Benzazepinones and benzoxazepinones as antagonists of inhibitor of apoptosis proteins (IAPs) selective for the second baculovirus IAP repeat (BIR2) domain.

Andrew F. Donnell; Christophe Michoud; Kenneth C. Rupert; Xiaochun Han; Douglas Aguilar; Karl B. Frank; Adrian J. Fretland; Lin Gao; Barry S. Goggin; J. Heather Hogg; Kyoungja Hong; Cheryl A. Janson; Robert Francis Kester; Norman Kong; Kang Le; Shirley Li; Weiling Liang; Louis J. Lombardo; Yan Lou; Christine Lukacs; Steven Gregory Mischke; John Anthony Moliterni; Ann Polonskaia; Andrew D. Schutt; Dave S. Solis; Anthony Specian; Robert Taylor; Martin Weisel; Stacy W. Remiszewski

XIAP is a key regulator of apoptosis, and its overexpression in cancer cells may contribute to their survival. The antiapoptotic function of XIAP derives from its BIR domains, which bind to and inhibit pro-apoptotic caspases. Most known IAP inhibitors are selective for the BIR3 domain and bind to cIAP1 and cIAP2 as well as XIAP. Pathways activated upon cIAP binding contribute to the function of these compounds. Inhibitors selective for XIAP should exert pro-apoptotic effects through competition with the terminal caspases. This paper details our synthetic explorations of a novel XIAP BIR2-selective benzazepinone screening hit with a focus on increasing BIR2 potency and overcoming high in vivo clearance. These efforts led to the discovery of benzoxazepinone 40, a potent BIR2-selective inhibitor with good in vivo pharmacokinetic properties which potentiates apoptotic signaling in a manner mechanistically distinct from that of known pan-IAP inhibitors.


Proteins | 2006

The crystal structure of human muscle glycogen phosphorylase a with bound glucose and AMP: An intermediate conformation with T-state and R-state features.

Christine Lukacs; Nikos G. Oikonomakos; Robert Crowther; L. N. Hong; R. U. Kammlott; Wayne Levin; Shirley Li; Chaomin Liu; Debra Lucas-McGady; S. Pietranico; Linda M. Reik

The Crystal Structure of Human Muscle Glycogen Phosphorylase a with Bound Glucose and AMP: An Intermediate Conformation with T-State and R-State Features Christine M. Lukacs,,* Nikos G. Oikonomakos, Robert L. Crowther, Li-Na Hong, R. Ursula Kammlott, Wayne Levin, Shirley Li, Chao-Min Liu, Debra Lucas-McGady, Sherrie Pietranico, and Linda Reik Roche Pharmaceuticals, Discovery Chemistry, F. Hoffmann-La Roche, Nutley, New Jersey Roche Pharmaceuticals, Roche Discovery Technologies, F. Hoffmann-La Roche, Nutley, New Jersey Institute of Organic and Pharmaceutical Chemistry, The National Hellenic Research Foundation, Athens, Greece

Collaboration


Dive into the Christine Lukacs's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Aneel K. Aggarwal

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge