Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Clarence Yapp is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Clarence Yapp.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Discovery and optimization of small-molecule ligands for the CBP/p300 bromodomains.

Duncan A. Hay; Oleg Fedorov; Sarah Martin; Dean C. Singleton; Cynthia Tallant; Christopher Wells; Sarah Picaud; Martin Philpott; Octovia P. Monteiro; Catherine Rogers; Stuart J. Conway; Timothy P. C. Rooney; Anthony Tumber; Clarence Yapp; Panagis Filippakopoulos; Mark Edward Bunnage; Susanne Müller; Stefan Knapp; Christopher J. Schofield; Paul E. Brennan

Small-molecule inhibitors that target bromodomains outside of the bromodomain and extra-terminal (BET) sub-family are lacking. Here, we describe highly potent and selective ligands for the bromodomain module of the human lysine acetyl transferase CBP/p300, developed from a series of 5-isoxazolyl-benzimidazoles. Our starting point was a fragment hit, which was optimized into a more potent and selective lead using parallel synthesis employing Suzuki couplings, benzimidazole-forming reactions, and reductive aminations. The selectivity of the lead compound against other bromodomain family members was investigated using a thermal stability assay, which revealed some inhibition of the structurally related BET family members. To address the BET selectivity issue, X-ray crystal structures of the lead compound bound to the CREB binding protein (CBP) and the first bromodomain of BRD4 (BRD4(1)) were used to guide the design of more selective compounds. The crystal structures obtained revealed two distinct binding modes. By varying the aryl substitution pattern and developing conformationally constrained analogues, selectivity for CBP over BRD4(1) was increased. The optimized compound is highly potent (Kd = 21 nM) and selective, displaying 40-fold selectivity over BRD4(1). Cellular activity was demonstrated using fluorescence recovery after photo-bleaching (FRAP) and a p53 reporter assay. The optimized compounds are cell-active and have nanomolar affinity for CBP/p300; therefore, they should be useful in studies investigating the biological roles of CBP and p300 and to validate the CBP and p300 bromodomains as therapeutic targets.


Cancer Research | 2015

Generation of a Selective Small Molecule Inhibitor of the CBP/p300 Bromodomain for Leukemia Therapy

Sarah Picaud; Oleg Fedorov; Angeliki Thanasopoulou; Katharina Leonards; Katherine Louise Jones; Julia Meier; Heidi Olzscha; Octovia P. Monteiro; Sarah Martin; Martin Philpott; Anthony Tumber; Panagis Filippakopoulos; Clarence Yapp; Christopher Wells; Ka Hing Che; Andrew J. Bannister; Samuel Robson; Umesh Kumar; Nigel James Parr; Kevin Lee; Dave Lugo; Philip Jeffrey; Simon Taylor; Matteo Vecellio; C. Bountra; Paul E. Brennan; Alison O'Mahony; Sharlene Velichko; Susanne Müller; Duncan Hay

The histone acetyltransferases CBP/p300 are involved in recurrent leukemia-associated chromosomal translocations and are key regulators of cell growth. Therefore, efforts to generate inhibitors of CBP/p300 are of clinical value. We developed a specific and potent acetyl-lysine competitive protein-protein interaction inhibitor, I-CBP112, that targets the CBP/p300 bromodomains. Exposure of human and mouse leukemic cell lines to I-CBP112 resulted in substantially impaired colony formation and induced cellular differentiation without significant cytotoxicity. I-CBP112 significantly reduced the leukemia-initiating potential of MLL-AF9(+) acute myeloid leukemia cells in a dose-dependent manner in vitro and in vivo. Interestingly, I-CBP112 increased the cytotoxic activity of BET bromodomain inhibitor JQ1 as well as doxorubicin. Collectively, we report the development and preclinical evaluation of a novel, potent inhibitor targeting CBP/p300 bromodomains that impairs aberrant self-renewal of leukemic cells. The synergistic effects of I-CBP112 and current standard therapy (doxorubicin) as well as emerging treatment strategies (BET inhibition) provide new opportunities for combinatorial treatment of leukemia and potentially other cancers.


Chemical Science | 2013

5-Carboxy-8-hydroxyquinoline is a Broad Spectrum 2-Oxoglutarate Oxygenase Inhibitor which Causes Iron Translocation.

Richard J. Hopkinson; Anthony Tumber; Clarence Yapp; Rasheduzzaman Chowdhury; WeiShen Aik; Ka Hing Che; Xuan Shirley Li; Jan Kristensen; Oliver N. King; Mun Chiang Chan; Kar Kheng Yeoh; Hwanho Choi; Louise J. Walport; Cyrille C. Thinnes; Jacob T. Bush; Clarisse Lejeune; Anna M. Rydzik; Nathan R. Rose; Eleanor A. L. Bagg; Michael A. McDonough; T. Krojer; W.W. Yue; Stanley S. Ng; Lars Olsen; Paul E. Brennan; U. Oppermann; Susanne Müller-Knapp; Robert J. Klose; Peter J. Ratcliffe; Christopher J. Schofield

2-Oxoglutarate and iron dependent oxygenases are therapeutic targets for human diseases. Using a representative 2OG oxygenase panel, we compare the inhibitory activities of 5-carboxy-8-hydroxyquinoline (IOX1) and 4-carboxy-8-hydroxyquinoline (4C8HQ) with that of two other commonly used 2OG oxygenase inhibitors, N-oxalylglycine (NOG) and 2,4-pyridinedicarboxylic acid (2,4-PDCA). The results reveal that IOX1 has a broad spectrum of activity, as demonstrated by the inhibition of transcription factor hydroxylases, representatives of all 2OG dependent histone demethylase subfamilies, nucleic acid demethylases and γ-butyrobetaine hydroxylase. Cellular assays show that, unlike NOG and 2,4-PDCA, IOX1 is active against both cytosolic and nuclear 2OG oxygenases without ester derivatisation. Unexpectedly, crystallographic studies on these oxygenases demonstrate that IOX1, but not 4C8HQ, can cause translocation of the active site metal, revealing a rare example of protein ligand-induced metal movement.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

[1,2,4]triazolo[4,3-a]phthalazines: inhibitors of diverse bromodomains.

Oleg Fedorov; Hannah Lingard; Chris Wells; Octovia P. Monteiro; Sarah Picaud; T. Keates; Clarence Yapp; Martin Philpott; Sarah Martin; I. Felletar; Brian D. Marsden; Panagis Filippakopoulos; Susanne Müller; Stefan Knapp; Paul E. Brennan

Bromodomains are gaining increasing interest as drug targets. Commercially sourced and de novo synthesized substituted [1,2,4]triazolo[4,3-a]phthalazines are potent inhibitors of both the BET bromodomains such as BRD4 as well as bromodomains outside the BET family such as BRD9, CECR2, and CREBBP. This new series of compounds is the first example of submicromolar inhibitors of bromodomains outside the BET subfamily. Representative compounds are active in cells exhibiting potent cellular inhibition activity in a FRAP model of CREBBP and chromatin association. The compounds described are valuable starting points for discovery of selective bromodomain inhibitors and inhibitors with mixed bromodomain pharmacology.


Science Translational Medicine | 2015

Inflammation activation and resolution in human tendon disease.

Stephanie G. Dakin; Fernando O. Martinez; Clarence Yapp; Graham Wells; U. Oppermann; Benjamin Dean; Richard J. Smith; Kim Wheway; Bridget Watkins; Lucy Roche; A J Carr

Resolution of inflammatory pathway gene expression signatures in diseased tendons correlates with reduced tendon pain. Tending toward resolution Inflammation activation and resolution pathways remain poorly defined in tendon disease. In new work, Dakin et al. investigate shoulder tendons from patients before and after surgery. Diseased tendons showed different inflammation gene and protein signatures in early-stage disease compared to advanced-stage disease. The researchers identified pathways implicated in the resolution of tendon pain after surgical treatment. Investigation of inflammation activation pathways in cultured stromal cells derived from human diseased tendons revealed that the stromal cells may have been primed for inflammation. The authors also identified a stable metabolite of aspirin that may be therapeutically beneficial for the resolution of tendon inflammation. Improved understanding of the role of inflammation in tendon disease is required to facilitate therapeutic target discovery. We studied supraspinatus tendons from patients experiencing pain before and after surgical subacromial decompression treatment. Tendons were classified as having early, intermediate, or advanced disease, and inflammation was characterized through activation of pathways mediated by interferon (IFN), nuclear factor κB (NF-κB), glucocorticoid receptor, and signal transducer and activator of transcription 6 (STAT-6). Inflammation signatures revealed expression of genes and proteins induced by IFN and NF-κB in early-stage disease and genes and proteins induced by STAT-6 and glucocorticoid receptor activation in advanced-stage disease. The proresolving proteins FPR2/ALX and ChemR23 were increased in early-stage disease compared to intermediate- to advanced-stage disease. Patients who were pain-free after treatment had tendons with increased expression of CD206 and ALOX15 mRNA compared to tendons from patients who continued to experience pain after treatment, suggesting that these genes and their pathways may moderate tendon pain. Stromal cells from diseased tendons cultured in vitro showed increased expression of NF-κB and IFN target genes after treatment with lipopolysaccharide or IFNγ compared to stromal cells derived from healthy tendons. We identified 15-epi lipoxin A4, a stable lipoxin isoform derived from aspirin treatment, as potentially beneficial in the resolution of tendon inflammation.


Epigenetics & Chromatin | 2014

Assessing cellular efficacy of bromodomain inhibitors using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching

Martin Philpott; Catherine Rogers; Clarence Yapp; Chris Wells; Jean-Philippe Lambert; C. Strain-Damerell; N. Burgess-Brown; Anne-Claude Gingras; Stefan Knapp; Susanne Müller

BackgroundAcetylation of lysine residues in histone tails plays an important role in the regulation of gene transcription. Bromdomains are the readers of acetylated histone marks, and, consequently, bromodomain-containing proteins have a variety of chromatin-related functions. Moreover, they are increasingly being recognised as important mediators of a wide range of diseases. The first potent and selective bromodomain inhibitors are beginning to be described, but the diverse or unknown functions of bromodomain-containing proteins present challenges to systematically demonstrating cellular efficacy and selectivity for these inhibitors. Here we assess the viability of fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) assays as a target agnostic method for the direct visualisation of an on-target effect of bromodomain inhibitors in living cells.ResultsMutation of a conserved asparagine crucial for binding to acetylated lysines in the bromodomains of BRD3, BRD4 and TRIM24 all resulted in reduction of FRAP recovery times, indicating loss of or significantly reduced binding to acetylated chromatin, as did the addition of known inhibitors. Significant differences between wild type and bromodomain mutants for ATAD2, BAZ2A, BRD1, BRD7, GCN5L2, SMARCA2 and ZMYND11 required the addition of the histone deacetylase inhibitor suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA) to amplify the binding contribution of the bromodomain. Under these conditions, known inhibitors decreased FRAP recovery times back to mutant control levels. Mutation of the bromodomain did not alter FRAP recovery times for full-length CREBBP, even in the presence of SAHA, indicating that other domains are primarily responsible for anchoring CREBBP to chromatin. However, FRAP assays with multimerised CREBBP bromodomains resulted in a good assay to assess the efficacy of bromodomain inhibitors to this target. The bromodomain and extraterminal protein inhibitor PFI-1 was inactive against other bromodomain targets, demonstrating the specificity of the method.ConclusionsViable FRAP assays were established for 11 representative bromodomain-containing proteins that broadly cover the bromodomain phylogenetic tree. Addition of SAHA can overcome weak binding to chromatin, and the use of tandem bromodomain constructs can eliminate masking effects of other chromatin binding domains. Together, these results demonstrate that FRAP assays offer a potentially pan-bromodomain method for generating cell-based assays, allowing the testing of compounds with respect to cell permeability, on-target efficacy and selectivity.


Nature Communications | 2017

Highly selective inhibition of histone demethylases by de novo macrocyclic peptides.

Akane Kawamura; Martin Münzel; Tatsuya Kojima; Clarence Yapp; Bhaskar Bhushan; Yuki Goto; Anthony Tumber; Takayuki Katoh; Oliver N. King; Toby Passioura; Louise J. Walport; Stephanie B. Hatch; Sarah Madden; Susanne Müller; Paul E. Brennan; Rasheduzzaman Chowdhury; Richard J. Hopkinson; Hiroaki Suga; Christopher J. Schofield

The JmjC histone demethylases (KDMs) are linked to tumour cell proliferation and are current cancer targets; however, very few highly selective inhibitors for these are available. Here we report cyclic peptide inhibitors of the KDM4A-C with selectivity over other KDMs/2OG oxygenases, including closely related KDM4D/E isoforms. Crystal structures and biochemical analyses of one of the inhibitors (CP2) with KDM4A reveals that CP2 binds differently to, but competes with, histone substrates in the active site. Substitution of the active site binding arginine of CP2 to N-ɛ-trimethyl-lysine or methylated arginine results in cyclic peptide substrates, indicating that KDM4s may act on non-histone substrates. Targeted modifications to CP2 based on crystallographic and mass spectrometry analyses results in variants with greater proteolytic robustness. Peptide dosing in cells manifests KDM4A target stabilization. Although further development is required to optimize cellular activity, the results reveal the feasibility of highly selective non-metal chelating, substrate-competitive inhibitors of the JmjC KDMs.


Chemical Communications | 2015

Betti reaction enables efficient synthesis of 8-hydroxyquinoline inhibitors of 2-oxoglutarate oxygenases.

Cyrille C. Thinnes; Anthony Tumber; Clarence Yapp; Giuseppe Scozzafava; Tzu-Lan Yeh; Mun Chiang Chan; T. A. Tran; K. Hsu; Hanna Tarhonskaya; Louise J. Walport; Sarah E. Wilkins; Elisabeth D. Martinez; Susanne Müller; Christopher W. Pugh; Peter J. Ratcliffe; Paul E. Brennan; Akane Kawamura; Christopher J. Schofield

There is interest in developing potent, selective, and cell-permeable inhibitors of human ferrous iron and 2-oxoglutarate (2OG) oxygenases for use in functional and target validation studies. The 3-component Betti reaction enables efficient one-step C-7 functionalisation of modified 8-hydroxyquinolines (8HQs) to produce cell-active inhibitors of KDM4 histone demethylases and other 2OG oxygenases; the work exemplifies how a template-based metallo-enzyme inhibitor approach can be used to give biologically active compounds.


Annals of Biomedical Engineering | 2015

The Mechanical, Structural, and Compositional Changes of Tendon Exposed to Elastase.

Tyler M. Grant; Clarence Yapp; Qi Chen; Jan T. Czernuszka; Mark S. Thompson

The mechanical response of tendon is dependent on the interaction of structural molecules that constitute the extracellular matrix. However, little is known about the role of elastic fibers that are present in this structure. Elastase treatments have been used to elucidate the mechanical role of elastic fibers in numerous tissues. Here, we show that a standard elastase treatment affects the mechanical properties of tendon, including the ultimate tensile strength and failure strain. Moreover, elastase-treated specimens exhibit significant structural and compositional changes including crimp undulation and release of glycosaminoglycans. These data demonstrate that a common elastase treatment has a complex digestion profile that influences the structure–function relationship of tendon. Thus, defining the mechanical role of elastic fibers in tendon using this technique is challenging. This introduces new and exciting questions regarding the function of elastic fibers in tendon, which may not be as well understood as previously thought.


Chemistry & Biology | 2017

Potent and Selective KDM5 Inhibitor Stops Cellular Demethylation of H3K4me3 at Transcription Start Sites and Proliferation of MM1S Myeloma Cells.

Anthony Tumber; A Nuzzi; E S Hookway; Stephanie B. Hatch; S. Velupillai; C. Johansson; Akane Kawamura; P. Savitsky; Clarence Yapp; A. Szykowska; N Wu; C. Bountra; C. Strain-Damerell; N. Burgess-Brown; Gian Filippo Ruda; Oleg Fedorov; Shonagh Munro; Katherine S. England; R. Nowak; Christopher J. Schofield; N B La Thangue; Charlotte Pawlyn; Faith E. Davies; Gareth J. Morgan; Nicholas A. Athanasou; Susanne Müller; U. Oppermann; Paul E. Brennan

Summary Methylation of lysine residues on histone tail is a dynamic epigenetic modification that plays a key role in chromatin structure and gene regulation. Members of the KDM5 (also known as JARID1) sub-family are 2-oxoglutarate (2-OG) and Fe2+-dependent oxygenases acting as histone 3 lysine 4 trimethyl (H3K4me3) demethylases, regulating proliferation, stem cell self-renewal, and differentiation. Here we present the characterization of KDOAM-25, an inhibitor of KDM5 enzymes. KDOAM-25 shows biochemical half maximal inhibitory concentration values of <100 nM for KDM5A-D in vitro, high selectivity toward other 2-OG oxygenases sub-families, and no off-target activity on a panel of 55 receptors and enzymes. In human cell assay systems, KDOAM-25 has a half maximal effective concentration of ∼50 μM and good selectivity toward other demethylases. KDM5B is overexpressed in multiple myeloma and negatively correlated with the overall survival. Multiple myeloma MM1S cells treated with KDOAM-25 show increased global H3K4 methylation at transcriptional start sites and impaired proliferation.

Collaboration


Dive into the Clarence Yapp's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Stefan Knapp

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A J Carr

University of Oxford

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge