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Dive into the research topics where Craig Muldoon is active.

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Featured researches published by Craig Muldoon.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Activity and Predicted Nephrotoxicity of Synthetic Antibiotics Based on Polymyxin B

Alejandra Gallardo-Godoy; Craig Muldoon; Bernd Becker; Alysha G. Elliott; Lawrence H. Lash; Johnny X. Huang; Mark S. Butler; Ruby Pelingon; Angela M. Kavanagh; Soumya Ramu; Wanida Phetsang; Mark A. T. Blaskovich; Matthew A. Cooper

The polymyxin lipodecapeptides colistin and polymyxin B have become last resort therapies for infections caused by highly drug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria. Unfortunately, their utility is compromised by significant nephrotoxicity and polymyxin-resistant bacterial strains. We have conducted a systematic activity–toxicity investigation by varying eight of the nine polymyxin amino acid free side chains, preparing over 30 analogues using a novel solid-phase synthetic route. Compounds were tested against a panel of Gram-negative bacteria and counter-screened for in vitro cell toxicity. Promising compounds underwent additional testing against primary kidney cells isolated from human kidneys to better predict their nephrotoxic potential. Many of the new compounds possessed equal or better antimicrobial potency compared to polymyxin B, and some were less toxic than polymyxin B and colistin against mammalian HepG2 cells and human primary kidney cells. These initial structure–activity and structure–toxicity studies set the stage for further improvements to the polymyxin class of antibiotics.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Biological Diversity from a Structurally Diverse Library: Systematically Scanning Conformational Space Using a Pyranose Scaffold†

Giovanni Abbenante; Bernd Becker; Sébastien Blanc; Christopher I. Clark; Glenn Condie; Graeme Fraser; Matthias Grathwohl; Judy Halliday; Senka Henderson; Ann Lam; Ligong Liu; Maretta Mann; Craig Muldoon; Andrew Pearson; Rajaratnam Premraj; Tracie Ramsdale; Tony Rossetti; Karl Schafer; Giang Le Thanh; Gerald Tometzki; Frank Vari; Geraldine Verquin; Jennifer Waanders; Michael Leo West; Norbert Wimmer; Annika Yau; Johannes Zuegg; Wim Meutermans

Success in discovering bioactive peptide mimetics is often limited by the difficulties in correctly transposing known binding elements of the active peptide onto a small and metabolically more stable scaffold while maintaining bioactivity. Here we describe a scanning approach using a library of pyranose-based peptidomimetics that is structurally diverse in a systematic manner, designed to cover all possible conformations of tripeptide motifs containing two aromatic groups and one positive charge. Structural diversity was achieved by efficient selection of various chemoforms, characterized by a choice of pyranose scaffold of defined chirality and substitution pattern. A systematic scanning library of 490 compounds was thus designed, produced, and screened in vitro for activity at the somatostatin (sst(1-5)) and melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH(1)) receptors. Bioactive compounds were found for each target, with specific chemoform preferences identified in each case, which can be used to guide follow-on drug discovery projects without the need for scaffold hopping.


Nature Communications | 2015

Carbohydrate scaffolds as glycosyltransferase inhibitors with in vivo antibacterial activity

Johannes Zuegg; Craig Muldoon; George Adamson; Declan McKeveney; Giang Le Thanh; Rajaratnam Premraj; Bernd Becker; Mu Cheng; Alysha G. Elliott; Johnny X. Huang; Mark S. Butler; Megha Bajaj; Joachim Seifert; Latika Singh; Nicola F. Galley; David I. Roper; Adrian J. Lloyd; Christopher G. Dowson; Ting Jen Cheng; Wei Chieh Cheng; Dieter Demon; Evelyne Meyer; Wim Meutermans; Matthew A. Cooper

The rapid rise of multi-drug-resistant bacteria is a global healthcare crisis, and new antibiotics are urgently required, especially those with modes of action that have low-resistance potential. One promising lead is the liposaccharide antibiotic moenomycin that inhibits bacterial glycosyltransferases, which are essential for peptidoglycan polymerization, while displaying a low rate of resistance. Unfortunately, the lipophilicity of moenomycin leads to unfavourable pharmacokinetic properties that render it unsuitable for systemic administration. In this study, we show that using moenomycin and other glycosyltransferase inhibitors as templates, we were able to synthesize compound libraries based on novel pyranose scaffold chemistry, with moenomycin-like activity, but with improved drug-like properties. The novel compounds exhibit in vitro inhibition comparable to moenomycin, with low toxicity and good efficacy in several in vivo models of infection. This approach based on non-planar carbohydrate scaffolds provides a new opportunity to develop new antibiotics with low propensity for resistance induction.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2010

A versatile synthetic approach toward diversity libraries using monosaccharide scaffolds

Giang Le Thanh; Giovanni Abbenante; George Adamson; Bernd Becker; Christopher I. Clark; Glenn Condie; Tania Falzun; Matthias Grathwohl; Praveer Gupta; Michael Hanson; Ngoc Huynh; Peter L. Katavic; Krystle Kuipers; Ann Lam; Ligong Liu; Maretta Mann; Jeff Mason; Declan McKeveney; Craig Muldoon; Andrew Pearson; Premraj Rajaratnam; Sarah J. Ryan; Gerry Tometzki; Geraldine Verquin; Jennifer Waanders; Michael Leo West; Neil Wilcox; Norbert Wimmer; Annika Yau; Johannes Zuegg

The pyranose scaffold is unique in its ability to position pharmacophore substituents in various ways in 3D space, and unique pharmacophore scanning libraries could be envisaged that focus on scanning topography rather than diversity in the type of substituents. Approaches have been described that make use of amine and acid functionalities on the pyranose scaffolds to append substituents, and this has enabled the generation of libraries of significant structural diversity. Our general aim was to generate libraries of pyranose-based drug-like mimetics, where the substituents are held close to the scaffold, in order to obtain molecules with better defined positions for the pharmacophore substituents. Here we describe the development of a versatile synthetic route toward peptide mimetics build on 2-amino pyranose scaffolds. The method allows introduction of a wide range of substituent types, it is regio- and stereospecific, and the later diversity steps are performed on solid phase. Further, the same process was applied on glucose and allose scaffolds, in the exemplified cases, and is likely adaptable to other pyranose building blocks. The methods developed in this work give access to molecules that position the three selected binding elements in various 3D orientations on a pyranose scaffold and have been applied for the production of a systematically diverse library of several hundred monosaccharide-based mimetics.


Australian Journal of Chemistry | 2004

The Photodynamic Therapy (PDT) Anticancer Activity of a Range of Porphyrin Dimers and Related Compounds Derived from Hematoporphyrin

Christopher J. Byrne; Mathew A. Cooper; Prudence A. Cowled; Robert A. W. Johnstone; Lorraine Mackenzie; Lorely V. Marshallsay; Ian K. Morris; Craig Muldoon; Mark J. Raftery; Sek Sau Yin; A. David Ward

The synthesis of diporphyrins and analogous compounds related to those present in the oligomeric fraction (Photofrin II) obtained from hematoporphyrin derivative (HPD) is described. The photodynamic activity of these compounds, in vivo, varies from inactive to as active as Photofrin II. Factors that are important in determining this anticancer activity of the synthetic compounds are the presence of hydrophobic side chains, as well as the propionic acid side chains of the hematoporphyrin derived materials, and the nature of the linking group between the porphyrins.


Chemical Biology & Drug Design | 2016

Targeting Bacterial Cell Wall Peptidoglycan Synthesis by Inhibition of Glycosyltransferase Activity.

Michael F. Mesleh; Premraj Rajaratnam; Mary Conrad; Vasu Chandrasekaran; Christopher M. Liu; Bhaumik A. Pandya; You Seok Hwang; Peter T. Rye; Craig Muldoon; Bernd Becker; Johannes Zuegg; Wim Meutermans; Terence Moy

Synthesis of bacterial cell wall peptidoglycan requires glycosyltransferase enzymes that transfer the disaccharide–peptide from lipid II onto the growing glycan chain. The polymerization of the glycan chain precedes cross‐linking by penicillin‐binding proteins and is essential for growth for key bacterial pathogens. As such, bacterial cell wall glycosyltransferases are an attractive target for antibiotic drug discovery. However, significant challenges to the development of inhibitors for these targets include the development of suitable assays and chemical matter that is suited to the nature of the binding site. We developed glycosyltransferase enzymatic activity and binding assays using the natural products moenomycin and vancomycin as model inhibitors. In addition, we designed a library of disaccharide compounds based on the minimum moenomycin fragment with peptidoglycan glycosyltransferase inhibitory activity and based on a more drug‐like and synthetically versatile disaccharide building block. A subset of these disaccharide compounds bound and inhibited the glycosyltransferase enzymes, and these compounds could serve as chemical entry points for antibiotic development.


Nature Communications | 2018

Protein-inspired antibiotics active against vancomycin- and daptomycin-resistant bacteria

Mark A. T. Blaskovich; Karl A. Hansford; Yujing Gong; Mark S. Butler; Craig Muldoon; Johnny X. Huang; Soumya Ramu; Alberto B. Silva; Mu Cheng; Angela M. Kavanagh; Zyta Ziora; Rajaratnam Premraj; Fredrik Lindahl; Tanya A. Bradford; June C. Lee; Tomislav Karoli; Ruby Pelingon; David Edwards; Maite Amado; Alysha G. Elliott; Wanida Phetsang; Noor Huda Daud; Johan E. Deecke; Hanna E. Sidjabat; Sefetogi Ramaologa; Johannes Zuegg; Jason Richard Betley; Andrew P. G. Beevers; Richard Smith; Jason A. Roberts

The public health threat posed by a looming ‘post-antibiotic’ era necessitates new approaches to antibiotic discovery. Drug development has typically avoided exploitation of membrane-binding properties, in contrast to nature’s control of biological pathways via modulation of membrane-associated proteins and membrane lipid composition. Here, we describe the rejuvenation of the glycopeptide antibiotic vancomycin via selective targeting of bacterial membranes. Peptide libraries based on positively charged electrostatic effector sequences are ligated to N-terminal lipophilic membrane-insertive elements and then conjugated to vancomycin. These modified lipoglycopeptides, the ‘vancapticins’, possess enhanced membrane affinity and activity against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and other Gram-positive bacteria, and retain activity against glycopeptide-resistant strains. Optimised antibiotics show in vivo efficacy in multiple models of bacterial infection. This membrane-targeting strategy has potential to ‘revitalise’ antibiotics that have lost effectiveness against recalcitrant bacteria, or enhance the activity of other intravenous-administered drugs that target membrane-associated receptors.The antibiotic vancomycin inhibits bacterial cell wall synthesis by binding to a membrane-associated precursor. Here, Blaskovich et al. synthesize vancomycin derivatives containing lipophilic peptide moieties that enhance membrane affinity and in vivo activities against glycopeptide-resistant strains.


Journal of Peptide Science | 2012

New glycopeptidic antibiotics to combat multidrug resistant pathogens

Yujing Gong; Craig Muldoon; Rajaratnam Premraj; Zyta Ziora; Tanya A. Bradford; Mu Cheng; Soumya Ramu; Johnny X. Huang; Angela M. Kavanagh; Ruby Pelingon; J. C. Lee; K. Wong; Mark S. Butler; Mark A. T. Blaskovich; Matthew A. Cooper

Reference EPFL-CONF-184380doi:10.1002/psc.2449View record in Web of Science Record created on 2013-02-27, modified on 2017-05-12No abstract is available for this article.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2006

Targeting the forgotten transglycosylases

Judy Halliday; Declan McKeveney; Craig Muldoon; Premraj Rajaratnam; Wim Meutermans


Archive | 2003

Compounds that interact with kinases

Wim Meutermans; Karl Schafer; Michael Leo West; Craig Muldoon; Fiona Foley; Natalie Bouloc; Gerald Tometzki

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Johannes Zuegg

University of Queensland

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Wim Meutermans

University of Queensland

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Bernd Becker

University of Queensland

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Mark S. Butler

University of Queensland

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Judy Halliday

University of Queensland

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