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Dive into the research topics where Christopher J. Schulze is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher J. Schulze.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Examining the Fish Microbiome Vertebrate-Derived Bacteria as an Environmental Niche for the Discovery of Unique Marine Natural Products

Laura M. Sanchez; Weng Ruh Wong; Romina M. Riener; Christopher J. Schulze; Roger G. Linington

Historically, marine invertebrates have been a prolific source of unique natural products, with a diverse array of biological activities. Recent studies of invertebrate-associated microbial communities are revealing microorganisms as the true producers of many of these compounds. Inspired by the human microbiome project, which has highlighted the human intestine as a unique microenvironment in terms of microbial diversity, we elected to examine the bacterial communities of fish intestines (which we have termed the fish microbiome) as a new source of microbial and biosynthetic diversity for natural products discovery. To test the hypothesis that the fish microbiome contains microorganisms with unique capacity for biosynthesizing natural products, we examined six species of fish through a combination of dissection and culture-dependent evaluation of intestinal microbial communities. Using isolation media designed to enrich for marine Actinobacteria, we have found three main clades that show taxonomic divergence from known strains, several of which are previously uncultured. Extracts from these strains exhibit a wide range of activities against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative human pathogens, as well as several fish pathogens. Exploration of one of these extracts has identified the novel bioactive lipid sebastenoic acid as an anti-microbial agent, with activity against Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus subtilis, Enterococcus faecium, and Vibrio mimicus.


Journal of Natural Products | 2014

Borrelidin B: isolation, biological activity, and implications for nitrile biosynthesis.

Christopher J. Schulze; Walter M. Bray; Frank Loganzo; My-Hanh Lam; Teresa Szal; Anabella Villalobos; Frank E. Koehn; Roger G. Linington

Borrelidin (1) is a nitrile-containing bacterially derived polyketide that is a potent inhibitor of bacterial and eukaryotic threonyl-tRNA synthetases. We now report the discovery of borrelidin B (2), a tetrahydro-borrelidin derivative containing an aminomethyl group in place of the nitrile functionality in borrelidin. The discovery of this new metabolite has implications for both the biosynthesis of the nitrile group and the bioactivity of the borrelidin compound class. Screening in the SToPS assay for tRNA synthetase inhibition revealed that the nitrile moiety is essential for activity, while profiling using our in-house image-based cytological profiling assay demonstrated that 2 retains biological activity by causing a mitotic stall, even in the absence of the nitrile motif.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2015

Salinipostins A-K, long-chain bicyclic phosphotriesters as a potent and selective antimalarial chemotype.

Christopher J. Schulze; Gabriel Navarro; Daniel H. Ebert; Joseph L. DeRisi; Roger G. Linington

Despite significant advances in antimalarial chemotherapy over the past 30 years, development of resistance to frontline drugs remains a significant challenge that limits efforts to eradicate the disease. We now report the discovery of a new class of antimalarials, salinipostins A-K, with low nanomolar potencies and high selectivity indices against mammalian cells (salinipostin A: Plasmodium falciparum EC50 50 nM, HEK293T cytotoxicity EC50 > 50 μM). These compounds were isolated from a marine-derived Salinospora sp. bacterium and contain a bicyclic phosphotriester core structure, which is a rare motif among natural products. This scaffold differs significantly from the structures of known antimalarial compounds and represents a new lead structure for the development of therapeutic targets in malaria. Examination of the growth stage specificity of salinipostin A indicates that it exhibits growth stage-specific effects that differ from compounds that inhibit heme polymerization, while resistance selection experiments were unable to identify parasite populations that exhibited significant resistance against this compound class.


ACS Infectious Diseases | 2016

Design of Selective Substrates and Activity-Based Probes for Hydrolase Important for Pathogenesis 1 (HIP1) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Christian S. Lentz; Alvaro A. Ordonez; Paulina Kasperkiewicz; Florencia La Greca; Anthony J. O’Donoghue; Christopher J. Schulze; James C. Powers; Charles S. Craik; Marcin Drag; Sanjay K. Jain; Matthew Bogyo

Although serine proteases are important mediators of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) virulence, there are currently no tools to selectively block or visualize members of this family of enzymes. Selective reporter substrates or activity-based probes (ABPs) could provide a means to monitor infection and response to therapy using imaging methods. Here, we use a combination of substrate selectivity profiling and focused screening to identify optimized reporter substrates and ABPs for the Mtb “Hydrolase important for pathogenesis 1” (Hip1) serine protease. Hip1 is a cell-envelope-associated enzyme with minimal homology to host proteases, making it an ideal target for probe development. We identified substituted 7-amino-4-chloro-3-(2-bromoethoxy)isocoumarins as irreversible inhibitor scaffolds. Furthermore, we used specificity data to generate selective reporter substrates and to further optimize a selective chloroisocoumarin inhibitor. These new reagents are potentially useful in delineating the roles of Hip1 during pathogenesis or as diagnostic imaging tools for specifically monitoring Mtb infections.


Nature Methods | 2016

An in vivo multiplexed small-molecule screening platform

Barbara M. Grüner; Christopher J. Schulze; Dian Yang; Daisuke Ogasawara; Melissa M. Dix; Zoë N. Rogers; Chen Hua Chuang; Christopher D. McFarland; Shin-Heng Chiou; J. Mark Brown; Benjamin F. Cravatt; Matthew Bogyo; Monte M. Winslow

Phenotype-based small-molecule screening is a powerful method to identify molecules that regulate cellular functions. However, such screens are generally performed in vitro under conditions that do not necessarily model complex physiological conditions or disease states. Here, we use molecular cell barcoding to enable direct in vivo phenotypic screening of small-molecule libraries. The multiplexed nature of this approach allows rapid in vivo analysis of hundreds to thousands of compounds. Using this platform, we screened >700 covalent inhibitors directed toward hydrolases for their effect on pancreatic cancer metastatic seeding. We identified multiple hits and confirmed the relevant target of one compound as the lipase ABHD6. Pharmacological and genetic studies confirmed the role of this enzyme as a regulator of metastatic fitness. Our results highlight the applicability of this multiplexed screening platform for investigating complex processes in vivo.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Development of an activity-based probe for acyl-protein thioesterases

Megan Garland; Christopher J. Schulze; Ian T. Foe; Wouter A. van der Linden; Matthew A. Child; Matthew Bogyo

Protein palmitoylation is a dynamic post-translational modification (PTM) important for cellular functions such as protein stability, trafficking, localization, and protein-protein interactions. S-palmitoylation occurs via the addition of palmitate to cysteine residues via a thioester linkage, catalyzed by palmitoyl acyl transferases (PATs), with removal of the palmitate catalyzed by acyl protein thioesterases (APTs) and palmitoyl-protein thioesterases (PPTs). Tools that target the regulators of palmitoylation–PATs, APTs and PPTs–will improve understanding of this essential PTM. Here, we describe the synthesis and application of a cell-permeable activity-based probe (ABP) that targets APTs in intact mammalian cells and the parasite Toxoplasma gondii. Using a focused library of substituted chloroisocoumarins, we identified a probe scaffold with nanomolar affinity for human APTs (HsAPT1 and HsAPT2) and synthesized a fluorescent ABP, JCP174-BODIPY TMR (JCP174-BT). We use JCP174-BT to profile HsAPT activity in situ in mammalian cells, to detect an APT in T. gondii (TgPPT1). We show discordance between HsAPT activity levels and total protein concentration in some cell lines, indicating that total protein levels may not be representative of APT activity in complex systems, highlighting the utility of this probe.


Cell | 2014

A systematic analysis of biosynthetic gene clusters in the human microbiome reveals a common family of antibiotics

Mohamed S. Donia; Peter Cimermancic; Christopher J. Schulze; Laura C. Wieland Brown; John Martin; Makedonka Mitreva; Jon Clardy; Roger G. Linington; Michael A. Fischbach


Chemistry & Biology | 2013

“Function-First” Lead Discovery: Mode of Action Profiling of Natural Product Libraries Using Image-Based Screening

Christopher J. Schulze; Walter M. Bray; Marcos H. Woerhmann; Joshua M. Stuart; R. Scott Lokey; Roger G. Linington


ACS Chemical Biology | 2015

Genome-Directed Lead Discovery: Biosynthesis, Structure Elucidation, and Biological Evaluation of Two Families of Polyene Macrolactams against Trypanosoma brucei.

Christopher J. Schulze; Mohamed S. Donia; Jair L. Siqueira-Neto; Debalina Ray; Jevgenij A. Raskatov; Richard E. Green; James H. McKerrow; Michael A. Fischbach; Roger G. Linington


ACS Infectious Diseases | 2016

Cysteine Cathepsin Inhibitors as Anti-Ebola Agents.

Wouter A. van der Linden; Christopher J. Schulze; Andrew S. Herbert; Tyler B. Krause; Ariel A. Wirchnianski; John M. Dye; Kartik Chandran; Matthew Bogyo

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Michael A. Fischbach

California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences

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Walter M. Bray

University of California

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Alvaro A. Ordonez

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Andrew S. Herbert

United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases

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