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Dive into the research topics where Christopher A. Alabi is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher A. Alabi.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Sequence-defined polymers via orthogonal allyl acrylamide building blocks.

Mintu Porel; Christopher A. Alabi

Biological systems have long recognized the importance of macromolecular diversity and have evolved efficient processes for the rapid synthesis of sequence-defined biopolymers. However, achieving sequence control via synthetic methods has proven to be a difficult challenge. Herein we describe efforts to circumvent this difficulty via the use of orthogonal allyl acrylamide building blocks and a liquid-phase fluorous support for the de novo design and synthesis of sequence-specific polymers. We demonstrate proof-of-concept via synthesis and characterization of two sequence-isomeric 10-mer polymers. (1)H NMR and LCMS were used to confirm their chemical structure while tandem MS was used to confirm sequence identity. Further validation of this methodology was provided via the successful synthesis of a sequence-specific 16-mer polymer incorporating nine different monomers. This strategy thus shows promise as an efficient approach for the assembly of sequence-specific functional polymers.


Nature Chemistry | 2016

Sequence-defined bioactive macrocycles via an acid-catalysed cascade reaction

Mintu Porel; Dana N. Thornlow; Ngoc N. Phan; Christopher A. Alabi

Synthetic macrocycles derived from sequence-defined oligomers are a unique structural class whose ring size, sequence and structure can be tuned via precise organization of the primary sequence. Similar to peptides and other peptidomimetics, these well-defined synthetic macromolecules become pharmacologically relevant when bioactive side chains are incorporated into their primary sequence. In this article, we report the synthesis of oligothioetheramide (oligoTEA) macrocycles via a one-pot acid-catalysed cascade reaction. The versatility of the cyclization chemistry and modularity of the assembly process was demonstrated via the synthesis of >20 diverse oligoTEA macrocycles. Structural characterization via NMR spectroscopy revealed the presence of conformational isomers, which enabled the determination of local chain dynamics within the macromolecular structure. Finally, we demonstrate the biological activity of oligoTEA macrocycles designed to mimic facially amphiphilic antimicrobial peptides. The preliminary results indicate that macrocyclic oligoTEAs with just two-to-three cationic charge centres can elicit potent antibacterial activity against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria.


Journal of Virology | 2017

In Vivo Efficacy of Measles Virus Fusion Protein-Derived Peptides Is Modulated by the Properties of Self-Assembly and Membrane Residence.

T. N. Figueira; Laura M. Palermo; A. S. Veiga; Devra Huey; Christopher A. Alabi; Nuno C. Santos; J. C. Welsch; Cyrille Mathieu; Branka Horvat; Stefan Niewiesk; Anne Moscona; Miguel A. R. B. Castanho; Matteo Porotto

ABSTRACT Measles virus (MV) infection is undergoing resurgence and remains one of the leading causes of death among young children worldwide despite the availability of an effective measles vaccine. MV infects its target cells by coordinated action of the MV hemagglutinin (H) and fusion (F) envelope glycoproteins; upon receptor engagement by H, the prefusion F undergoes a structural transition, extending and inserting into the target cell membrane and then refolding into a postfusion structure that fuses the viral and cell membranes. By interfering with this structural transition of F, peptides derived from the heptad repeat (HR) regions of F can inhibit MV infection at the entry stage. In previous work, we have generated potent MV fusion inhibitors by dimerizing the F-derived peptides and conjugating them to cholesterol. We have shown that prophylactic intranasal administration of our lead fusion inhibitor efficiently protects from MV infection in vivo. We show here that peptides tagged with lipophilic moieties self-assemble into nanoparticles until they reach the target cells, where they are integrated into cell membranes. The self-assembly feature enhances biodistribution and the half-life of the peptides, while integration into the target cell membrane increases fusion inhibitor potency. These factors together modulate in vivo efficacy. The results suggest a new framework for developing effective fusion inhibitory peptides. IMPORTANCE Measles virus (MV) infection causes an acute illness that may be associated with infection of the central nervous system (CNS) and severe neurological disease. No specific treatment is available. We have shown that fusion-inhibitory peptides delivered intranasally provide effective prophylaxis against MV infection. We show here that specific biophysical properties regulate the in vivo efficacy of MV F-derived peptides.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2017

Sequence-Defined Backbone Modifications Regulate Antibacterial Activity of OligoTEAs

Mintu Porel; Dana N. Thornlow; Christine M. Artim; Christopher A. Alabi

In response to the urgent need for new antibiotic development strategies, antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) and other synthetic polymers are being actively investigated as promising alternatives to traditional antibiotics. Although most AMPs display lytic activity against several types of bacteria, they have poor toxicology profiles and are susceptible to proteolysis in vivo. While many synthetic variants have been created to mimic AMPs by tuning the hydrophobic to cationic ratio of the side-chain groups, few have decoupled the effects of charge from hydrophobicity in discrete systems, and none have investigated the effect of backbone hydrophobicity. We recently developed a rapid and efficient approach for the assembly of synthetic sequence-defined oligothioetheramides (oligoTEAs) that are resistant to protease activity. Our oligoTEA assembly scheme allows direct access to the oligomer backbone, which enables precise tuning of oligoTEA hydrophobicity while keeping charge constant. In this study, we synthesized a new class of antibacterial oligoTEAs (AOTs) with precise control over backbone hydrophobicity and composition. Our studies suggest that AOTs lyse cells via membrane permeabilization and that hydrophobicity and macromolecular conformation are key properties that regulate AOT activity. Some of our AOTs show highly promising antibacterial activity (MIC ∼ 0.5-5 μM) against clinically relevant pathogens in the presence of serum, with little to no toxicity against RBCs and HEK293 cells. Taken together, our data identify design parameters and criteria that may be useful for assembling the next generation of potent and selective AOTs.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2017

Versatile Platform for the Synthesis of Orthogonally Cleavable Heteromultifunctional Cross-Linkers

Michelle R. Sorkin; Joshua A. Walker; Joseph S. Brown; Christopher A. Alabi

Cleavable and heteromultifunctional cross-linkers have proven critical in a wide range of biological applications. Traditional approaches for synthesizing these linkers suffer from various synthetic and functional limitations. In this work, an efficient sequence-defined synthetic methodology, developed for the assembly of oligothioetheramides, was used to address many of these limitations. Four heterotrifunctional cross-linkers with up to two orthogonal internal cleavage sites were synthesized. These linkers were conjugated to a pair of fluorophores that undergo Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) and a model protein-human transferrin. Orthogonal bond cleavage was validated by mass spectrometry, fluorescent gel electrophoresis, and confocal microscopy. These studies demonstrate the versatility and biological utility of oligothioetheramides as a new class of multifunctional chemical cross-linkers and biologically relevant fluorescent probes.


Macromolecules | 2017

Synthesis and Solution-Phase Characterization of Sulfonated Oligothioetheramides

Joseph S. Brown; Yaset M. Acevedo; Grace D. He; Jack H. Freed; Paulette Clancy; Christopher A. Alabi

Nature has long demonstrated the importance of chemical sequence to induce structure and tune physical interactions. Investigating macromolecular structure and dynamics is paramount to understand macromolecular binding and target recognition. To that end, we have synthesized and characterized flexible sulfonated oligothioetheramides (oligo-TEAs) by variable temperature pulse field gradient (PFG) NMR, double electron-electron resonance (DEER), and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to capture their room temperature structure and dynamics in water. We have examined the contributions of synthetic length (2-12mer), pendant group charge, and backbone hydrophobicity. We observe significant entropic collapse, driven in part by backbone hydrophobicity. Analysis of individual monomer contributions revealed larger changes due to the backbone compared to pendant groups. We also observe screening of intramolecular electrostatic repulsions. Finally, we comment on the combination of DEER and PFG NMR measurements via Stokes-Einstein-Sutherland diffusion theory. Overall, this sensitive characterization holds promise to enable de novo development of macromolecular structure and sequence-structure-function relationships with flexible, but biologically functional macromolecules.


Macromolecular Bioscience | 2018

Sensitivity of Antibacterial Activity to Backbone Sequence in Constitutionally Isomeric OligoTEAs

Emily A. Hoff; Christine M. Artim; Joseph S. Brown; Christopher A. Alabi

Antimicrobial peptides are promising alternatives to traditional antibiotics but their translational potential is limited due to rapid degradation by serum proteases. Recently, a number of peptidomimetics with backbones resistant to proteolysis have been synthesized and their antimicrobial potential evaluated as a function of their hydrophobic to cationic ratio. However, these mimetics also have a fixed backbone thus making it difficult to isolate the effect of backbone hydrophobic composition and sequence. In this work, advantage is taken of the oligothioetheramide (oligoTEA) synthetic strategy that allows for precise control over backbone and pendant group placement to systematically study the effect of backbone hydrophobic sequence while keeping pendant group constant. Biophysical data acquired with a set of constitutional oligoTEA isomers show that backbone hydrophobic sequence, that is, local hydrophobicity, affects the mode of oligoTEA interaction with lipid bilayers. This differential interaction among the constitutionally isomeric oligoTEAs is manifested in their antibacterial activities and points to the possibility of using backbone hydrophobic sequence to tune antibacterial potency and selectivity.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2018

Effective in Vivo Targeting of Influenza Virus through a Cell-Penetrating/Fusion Inhibitor Tandem Peptide Anchored to the Plasma Membrane

Tiago Nascimento Figueira; Marcelo T. Augusto; Ksenia Rybkina; Debora Stelitano; Maria Gabriela Noval; olivia harder; Ana Salomé Veiga; Devra Huey; Christopher A. Alabi; Sudipta Biswas; Stefan Niewiesk; Anne Moscona; Nuno C. Santos; Miguel A. R. B. Castanho; Matteo Porotto

The impact of influenza virus infection is felt each year on a global scale when approximately 5-10% of adults and 20-30% of children globally are infected. While vaccination is the primary strategy for influenza prevention, there are a number of likely scenarios for which vaccination is inadequate, making the development of effective antiviral agents of utmost importance. Anti-influenza treatments with innovative mechanisms of action are critical in the face of emerging viral resistance to the existing drugs. These new antiviral agents are urgently needed to address future epidemic (or pandemic) influenza and are critical for the immune-compromised cohort who cannot be vaccinated. We have previously shown that lipid tagged peptides derived from the C-terminal region of influenza hemagglutinin (HA) were effective influenza fusion inhibitors. In this study, we modified the influenza fusion inhibitors by adding a cell penetrating peptide sequence to promote intracellular targeting. These fusion-inhibiting peptides self-assemble into ∼15-30 nm nanoparticles (NPs), target relevant infectious tissues in vivo, and reduce viral infectivity upon interaction with the cell membrane. Overall, our data show that the CPP and the lipid moiety are both required for efficient biodistribution, fusion inhibition, and efficacy in vivo.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2018

Intracellular Delivery via Noncharged Sequence-Defined Cell-Penetrating Oligomers

Ngoc N. Phan; Connie Li; Christopher A. Alabi

Intracellular drug delivery systems are often limited by their poor serum stability and delivery efficiency. Cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs), particularly those derived from basic protein subunits, have been studied extensively in this regard and used for the delivery of a variety of cargoes in vitro. Although promising, traditional cationic CPPs have some drawbacks that hinder their therapeutic application such as rapid proteolytic degradation and undesired interactions with the biological milieu. To overcome these limitations, this article details the discovery of a new class of noncharged cell-penetrating oligoTEAs (CPOTs) that undergo extensive and rapid cellular entry across different cell lines with low cytotoxicity. CPOTs outperform a widely used CPP, R9 peptide. This new class of highly efficient noncharged macromolecular transporters are distinct from their cationic counterparts and show strong promise for the intracellular delivery of hydrophilic small-molecule therapeutics.


Advanced Materials | 2018

Biomimetic Electronic Devices for Measuring Bacterial Membrane Disruption

C. Pitsalidis; Anna-Maria Pappa; Mintu Porel; Christine M. Artim; Gregório C. Faria; Duc D Duong; Christopher A. Alabi; Susan Daniel; Alberto Salleo; Róisín M. Owens

Antibiotic discovery has experienced a severe slowdown in terms of discovery of new candidates. In vitro screening methods using phospholipids to model the bacterial membrane provide a route to identify molecules that specifically disrupt bacterial membranes causing cell death. Thanks to the electrically insulating properties of the major component of the cell membrane, phospholipids, electronic devices are highly suitable transducers of membrane disruption. The organic electrochemical transistor (OECT) is a highly sensitive ion-to-electron converter. Here, the OECT is used as a transducer of the permeability of a lipid monolayer (ML) at a liquid:liquid interface, designed to read out changes in ion flux caused by compounds that interact with, and disrupt, lipid assembly. This concept is illustrated using the well-documented antibiotic Polymixin B and the highly sensitive quantitation of permeability of the lipid ML induced by two novel recently described antibacterial amine-based oligothioetheramides is shown, highlighting molecular scale differences in their disruption capabilities. It is anticipated that this platform has the potential to play a role in front-line antimicrobial compound design and characterization thanks to the compatibility of semiconductor microfabrication technology with high-throughput readouts.

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Matteo Porotto

Columbia University Medical Center

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Miguel A. R. B. Castanho

Instituto de Medicina Molecular

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Nuno C. Santos

Instituto de Medicina Molecular

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