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Dive into the research topics where Chuo Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by Chuo Chen.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2009

Small molecule–mediated disruption of Wnt-dependent signaling in tissue regeneration and cancer

Baozhi Chen; Michael E. Dodge; Wei Tang; Jianming Lu; Zhiqiang Ma; Chih Wei Fan; Shuguang Wei; Wayne Hao; Jessica A. Kilgore; Noelle S. Williams; Michael G. Roth; James F. Amatruda; Chuo Chen; Lawrence Lum

SUMMARY The pervasive influence of secreted Wnt signaling proteins in tissue homeostasis and tumorigenesis has galvanized efforts to identify small molecules that target Wnt-mediated cellular responses. By screening a diverse synthetic chemical library, we have discovered two novel classes of small molecules that disrupt Wnt pathway responses - whereas one class inhibits the activity of Porcupine (Porcn), a membrane-bound acyltransferase that is essential to the production of Wnt proteins, the other abrogates destruction of Axin proteins, suppressors of Wnt/β-catenin pathway activity. With these small molecules we establish a chemical genetic approach for studying Wnt pathway responses and stem cell function in adult tissue. We achieve transient, reversible suppression of Wnt/β-catenin pathway response in vivo, and establish a mechanism-based approach to target cancerous cell growth. The signal transduction mechanisms shown here to be chemically tractable additionally contribute to Wnt-independent signal transduction pathways and thus could be broadly exploited for chemical genetics and therapeutic goals.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Visible Light-Promoted Metal-Free C–H Activation: Diarylketone-Catalyzed Selective Benzylic Mono- and Difluorination

Ji-Bao Xia; Chen Zhu; Chuo Chen

We report herein an operationally simple method for the direct conversion of benzylic C-H groups to C-F. We show that visible light can activate diarylketones to abstract a benzylic hydrogen atom selectively. Adding a fluorine radical donor yields the benzylic fluoride and regenerates the catalyst. The selective formation of mono- and difluorination products can be achieved by catalyst control. 9-Fluorenone catalyzes benzylic C-H monofluorination, while xanthone catalyzes benzylic C-H difluorination. The scope and efficiency of this new C-H fluorination method are significantly better than those of the existing methods. This is also the first report of selective C-H gem-difluorination.


Development | 2011

Canonical Wnt9b signaling balances progenitor cell expansion and differentiation during kidney development

Courtney M. Karner; Amrita Das; Zhendong Ma; Michelle Self; Chuo Chen; Lawrence Lum; Guillermo Oliver; Thomas J. Carroll

The mammalian kidney is composed of thousands of individual epithelial tubules known as nephrons. Deficits in nephron number are associated with myriad diseases ranging from complete organ failure to congenital hypertension. A balance between differentiation and maintenance of a mesenchymal progenitor cell population determines the final number of nephrons. How this balance is struck is poorly understood. Previous studies have suggested that Wnt9b/β-catenin signaling induced differentiation (mesenchymal-to-epithelial transition) in a subset of the progenitors but needed to be repressed in the remaining progenitors to keep them in the undifferentiated state. Here, we report that Wnt9b/β-catenin signaling is active in the progenitors and is required for their renewal/proliferation. Using a combination of approaches, we have revealed a mechanism through which cells receiving the same Wnt9b/β-catenin signal can respond in distinct ways (proliferate versus differentiate) depending on the cellular environment in which the signal is received. Interpretation of the signal is dependent, at least in part, on the activity of the transcription factor Six2. Six2-positive cells that receive the Wnt9b signal are maintained as progenitors whereas cells with reduced levels of Six2 are induced to differentiate by Wnt9b. Using this simple mechanism, the kidney is able to balance progenitor cell expansion and differentiation insuring proper nephron endowment. These findings provide novel insights into the molecular mechanisms that regulate progenitor cell differentiation during normal and pathological conditions.


Nature Cell Biology | 2013

Stromal–epithelial crosstalk regulates kidney progenitor cell differentiation

Amrita Das; Shunsuke Tanigawa; Courtney M. Karner; Mei Xin; Lawrence Lum; Chuo Chen; Eric N. Olson; Alan O. Perantoni; Thomas J. Carroll

Present models suggest that the fate of the kidney epithelial progenitors is solely regulated by signals from the adjacent ureteric bud. The bud provides signals that regulate the survival, renewal and differentiation of these cells. Recent data suggest that Wnt9b, a ureteric-bud-derived factor, is sufficient for both progenitor cell renewal and differentiation. How the same molecule induces two seemingly contradictory processes is unknown. Here, we show that signals from the stromal fibroblasts cooperate with Wnt9b to promote differentiation of the progenitors. The atypical cadherin Fat4 encodes at least part of this stromal signal. Our data support a model whereby proper kidney size and function is regulated by balancing opposing signals from the ureteric bud and stroma to promote renewal and differentiation of the nephron progenitors.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Structure/Activity Relationship Studies of Small-Molecule Inhibitors of Wnt Response

Jianming Lu; Zhiqiang Ma; Jen-Chieh Hsieh; Chih Wei Fan; Baozhi Chen; Jamie Longgood; Noelle S. Williams; James F. Amatruda; Lawrence Lum; Chuo Chen

Suppression of oncogenic Wnt-mediated signaling holds promise as an anti-cancer therapeutic strategy. We previously reported a novel class of small molecules (IWR-1/2, inhibitors of Wnt response) that antagonize Wnt signaling by stabilizing the Axin destruction complex. Herein, we present the results of structure-activity relationship studies of these compounds.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Synthesis and structure revision of nakiterpiosin.

Shuanhu Gao; Qiaoling Wang; Chuo Chen

This manuscript describes a convergent synthesis and the revision of the relative stereochemistry of nakiterpiosin, a marine C-nor-D-homosteroid. Our synthesis features a late-stage carbonylative Stille cross-coupling reaction and a photo-Nazarov cyclization reaction that deliver the complete nakiterpiosin skeleton efficiently.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1989

(+)-1(S), 5(R), 8(S)-8-phenyl-2-azabicyclo[3.3.0]octan-8-ol n,o-methylboronate (2) and its enantiomer, chiral chemzymes which serve as catalysts for their own enantioselective synthesis

E. J. Corey; Chuo Chen; Gregory A. Reichard

Abstract An efficient synthesis of (+)-1( S ), 5( R ), 8( S )-8-phenyl-2-azabicyclo[3.3.0]octan-8-ol ( 1 ) and its enantiomer is described. The B-methyloxazaborolidine derivatives ( 2 ) of these amino alcohols are excellent catalysts (chemzymes) for the enantioselective reduction of a variety of achiral ketones to chiral secondary alcohols, e.g. acetophenone, 98% ee; pinacolone, 98% ee; α-tetralone, 97% ee; and 2-bromo-2-cyclohexen-1-one, 98% ee. The oxazaborolidine 2 is a catalyst for the enantioselective synthesis of 14 , a starting material for the synthesis of chiral 2 itself.


Science | 2014

Asymmetric syntheses of sceptrin and massadine and evidence for biosynthetic enantiodivergence.

Zhiqiang Ma; Xiaolei Wang; Xiao Wang; Rodrigo A. Rodriguez; Curtis E. Moore; Shuanhu Gao; Xianghui Tan; Yuyong Ma; Arnold L. Rheingold; Phil S. Baran; Chuo Chen

Cycloaddition is an essential tool in chemical synthesis. Instead of using light or heat as a driving force, marine sponges promote cycloaddition with a more versatile but poorly understood mechanism in producing pyrrole–imidazole alkaloids sceptrin, massadine, and ageliferin. Through de novo synthesis of sceptrin and massadine, we show that sponges may use single-electron oxidation as a central mechanism to promote three different types of cycloaddition. Additionally, we provide surprising evidence that, in contrast to previous reports, sceptrin, massadine, and ageliferin have mismatched chirality. Therefore, massadine cannot be an oxidative rearrangement product of sceptrin or ageliferin, as is commonly believed. Taken together, our results demonstrate unconventional chemical approaches to achieving cycloaddition reactions in synthesis and uncover enantiodivergence as a new biosynthetic paradigm for natural products. Syntheses of two natural products reveal a surprising divergence in the plausible biosynthetic precursors of their class. Sceptrin goes through the looking glass Marine sponges produce a trio of compounds—sceptrin, massadine, and ageliferin—that have intrigued chemists because they seemed to result from ring-forming reactions outside the standard repertoire of enzyme catalysis. Ma et al. now report laboratory syntheses of the first two compounds that uncover a surprising twist: It turns out the real structure of sceptrin is the mirror image of the originally reported structure. The work partially bolsters the prevailing biosynthetic hypothesis, though its revelation of enantiodivergence (the emergence of distinct mirror-image motifs in one compound class) is a rare event in natural product chemistry. Science, this issue p. 219


Cell Metabolism | 2015

2-Hydroxyglutarate Inhibits ATP Synthase and mTOR Signaling

Xudong Fu; Randall M. Chin; Laurent Vergnes; Heejun Hwang; Gang Deng; Yanpeng Xing; Melody Y. Pai; Sichen Li; Lisa Ta; Farbod Fazlollahi; Chuo Chen; Robert M. Prins; Michael A. Teitell; David Nathanson; Albert Lai; Kym F. Faull; Meisheng Jiang; Steven Clarke; Timothy F. Cloughesy; Thomas G. Graeber; Daniel Braas; Heather R. Christofk; Michael E. Jung; Karen Reue; Jing Huang

We discovered recently that the central metabolite α-ketoglutarate (α-KG) extends the lifespan of C. elegans through inhibition of ATP synthase and TOR signaling. Here we find, unexpectedly, that (R)-2-hydroxyglutarate ((R)-2HG), an oncometabolite that interferes with various α-KG-mediated processes, similarly extends worm lifespan. (R)-2HG accumulates in human cancers carrying neomorphic mutations in the isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) 1 and 2 genes. We show that, like α-KG, both (R)-2HG and (S)-2HG bind and inhibit ATP synthase and inhibit mTOR signaling. These effects are mirrored in IDH1 mutant cells, suggesting a growth-suppressive function of (R)-2HG. Consistently, inhibition of ATP synthase by 2-HG or α-KG in glioblastoma cells is sufficient for growth arrest and tumor cell killing under conditions of glucose limitation, e.g., when ketone bodies (instead of glucose) are supplied for energy. These findings inform therapeutic strategies and open avenues for investigating the roles of 2-HG and metabolites in biology and disease.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Diverse chemical scaffolds support direct inhibition of the membrane bound O-acyltransferase Porcupine

Michael E. Dodge; Jesung Moon; Rubina Tuladhar; Jianming Lu; Leni S. Jacob; Li Shu Zhang; Heping Shi; Xiaolei Wang; Enrico Moro; Alessandro Mongera; Francesco Argenton; Courtney M. Karner; Thomas J. Carroll; Chuo Chen; James F. Amatruda; Lawrence Lum

Background: The acyltransferase Porcupine (Porcn) is essential for active Wnt ligand production and is chemically tractable. Results: Novel small molecules targeting Porcn enables interrogation of Wnt signaling in vitro and in vivo. Conclusion: Porcn is highly druggable and supports diverse cellular responses in embryonic development and regeneration. Significance: Porcn inhibitors represent versatile chemical probes for Wnt signaling in vivo and are potential anti-cancer therapeutic agents. Secreted Wnt proteins constitute one of the largest families of intercellular signaling molecules in vertebrates with essential roles in embryonic development and adult tissue homeostasis. The functional redundancy of Wnt genes and the many forms of cellular responses they elicit, including some utilizing the transcriptional co-activator β-catenin, has limited the ability of classical genetic strategies to uncover their roles in vivo. We had previously identified a chemical compound class termed Inhibitor of Wnt Production (or IWP) that targets Porcupine (Porcn), an acyltransferase catalyzing the addition of fatty acid adducts onto Wnt proteins. Here we demonstrate that diverse chemical structures are able to inhibit Porcn by targeting its putative active site. When deployed in concert with small molecules that modulate the activity of Tankyrase enzymes and glycogen synthase kinase 3 β (GSK3β), additional transducers of Wnt/β-catenin signaling, the IWP compounds reveal an essential role for Wnt protein fatty acylation in eliciting β-catenin-dependent and -independent forms of Wnt signaling during zebrafish development. This collection of small molecules facilitates rapid dissection of Wnt gene function in vivo by limiting the influence of redundant Wnt gene functions on phenotypic outcomes and enables temporal manipulation of Wnt-mediated signaling in vertebrates.

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Lawrence Lum

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Zhiqiang Ma

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Jianming Lu

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Heping Shi

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Xianghui Tan

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Xiao Wang

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Xiaolei Wang

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Qiaoling Wang

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Ji-Bao Xia

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Shuanhu Gao

East China Normal University

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