Daniel P. Flaherty
University of Kansas
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Featured researches published by Daniel P. Flaherty.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2013
Michael T. Harris; Dawn M. Walker; Mark E. Drew; William G. Mitchell; Kevin Dao; Chad E. Schroeder; Daniel P. Flaherty; Warren S. Weiner; Jennifer E. Golden; James C. Morris
ABSTRACT Parasites in the genus Plasmodium cause disease throughout the tropic and subtropical regions of the world. P. falciparum, one of the deadliest species of the parasite, relies on glycolysis for the generation of ATP while it inhabits the mammalian red blood cell. The first step in glycolysis is catalyzed by hexokinase (HK). While the 55.3-kDa P. falciparum HK (PfHK) shares several biochemical characteristics with mammalian HKs, including being inhibited by its products, it has limited amino acid identity (∼26%) to the human HKs, suggesting that enzyme-specific therapeutics could be generated. To that end, interrogation of a selected small-molecule library of HK inhibitors has identified a class of PfHK inhibitors, isobenzothiazolinones, some of which have 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC50s) of <1 μM. Inhibition was reversible by dilution but not by treatment with a reducing agent, suggesting that the basis for enzyme inactivation was not covalent association with the inhibitor. Lastly, six of these compounds and the related molecule ebselen inhibited P. falciparum growth in vitro (50% effective concentration [EC50] of ≥0.6 and <6.8 μM). These findings suggest that the chemotypes identified here could represent leads for future development of therapeutics against P. falciparum.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014
Daniel P. Flaherty; Denise S. Simpson; Melissa Miller; Brooks E. Maki; Beiyan Zou; Jie Shi; Meng Wu; Owen B. McManus; Jeffrey Aubé; Min Li; Jennifer E. Golden
TASK-1 is a two-pore domain potassium channel that is important to modulating cell excitability, most notably in the context of neuronal pathways. In order to leverage TASK-1 for therapeutic benefit, its physiological role needs better characterization; however, designing selective inhibitors that avoid the closely related TASK-3 channel has been challenging. In this study, a series of bis-amide derived compounds were found to demonstrate improved TASK-1 selectivity over TASK-3 compared to reported inhibitors. Optimization of a marginally selective hit led to analog 35 which displays a TASK-1 IC50=16 nM with 62-fold selectivity over TASK-3 in an orthogonal electrophysiology assay.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2016
Cecilia Lopez-Sambrooks; Shiteshu Shrimal; Carol Khodier; Daniel P. Flaherty; Natalie Rinis; Jonathan Charest; Ningguo Gao; Peng Zhao; Lance Wells; Tim Lewis; Mark A. Lehrman; Reid Gilmore; Jennifer E. Golden; Joseph N. Contessa
Asparagine (N)-linked glycosylation is a protein modification critical for glycoprotein folding, stability, and cellular localization. To identify small molecules that inhibit new targets in this biosynthetic pathway, we initiated a cell-based high-throughput screen and lead-compound-optimization campaign that delivered a cell-permeable inhibitor, NGI-1. NGI-1 targets oligosaccharyltransferase (OST), a hetero-oligomeric enzyme that exists in multiple isoforms and transfers oligosaccharides to recipient proteins. In non-small-cell lung cancer cells, NGI-1 blocks cell-surface localization and signaling of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) glycoprotein, but selectively arrests proliferation in only those cell lines that are dependent on EGFR (or fibroblast growth factor, FGFR) for survival. In these cell lines, OST inhibition causes cell-cycle arrest accompanied by induction of p21, autofluorescence, and cell morphology changes, all hallmarks of senescence. These results identify OST inhibition as a potential therapeutic approach for treating receptor-tyrosine-kinase-dependent tumors and provides a chemical probe for reversibly regulating N-linked glycosylation in mammalian cells.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Daljit S. Matharu; Daniel P. Flaherty; Denise S. Simpson; Chad E. Schroeder; Dong-Hoon Chung; Dan Yan; James W. Noah; Colleen B. Jonsson; E. Lucile White; Jeffrey Aubé; Richard K. Plemper; William Severson; Jennifer E. Golden
A quinazolinedione-derived screening hit 2 was discovered with cellular antiviral activity against respiratory syncytial virus (CPE EC50 = 2.1 μM), moderate efficacy in reducing viral progeny (4.2 log at 10 μM), and marginal cytotoxic liability (selectivity index, SI ∼ 24). Scaffold optimization delivered analogs with improved potency and selectivity profiles. Most notable were compounds 15 and 19 (EC50 = 300–500 nM, CC50 > 50 μM, SI > 100), which significantly reduced viral titer (>400,000-fold), and several analogs were shown to block the activity of the RNA-dependent RNA-polymerase complex of RSV.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Jessamyn Perlmutter; Lauren Forbes; Damian J. Krysan; Katherine Ebsworth-Mojica; Jennifer Colquhoun; Jenna L. Wang; Paul M. Dunman; Daniel P. Flaherty
Staphylococcus aureus is a rapidly growing health threat in the U.S., with resistance to several commonly prescribed treatments. A high-throughput screen identified the antihistamine terfenadine to possess, previously unreported, antimicrobial activity against S. aureus and other Gram-positive bacteria. In an effort to repurpose this drug, structure–activity relationship studies yielded 84 terfenadine-based analogues with several modifications providing increased activity versus S. aureus and other bacterial pathogens, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Mechanism of action studies revealed these compounds to exert their antibacterial effects, at least in part, through inhibition of the bacterial type II topoisomerases. This scaffold suffers from hERG liabilities which were not remedied through this round of optimization; however, given the overall improvement in activity of the set, terfenadine-based analogues provide a novel structural class of antimicrobial compounds with potential for further characterization as part of the continuing process to meet the current need for new antibiotics.
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2014
Daniel P. Flaherty; Justin R. Miller; Danielle M. Garshott; Michael Hedrick; Palak Gosalia; Yujie Li; Monika Milewski; Eliot Sugarman; Stefan Vasile; Sumeet Salaniwal; Ying Su; Layton H. Smith; Thomas Dy Chung; Anthony B. Pinkerton; Jeffrey Aubé; Michael U. Callaghan; Jennifer E. Golden; Andrew M. Fribley; Randal J. Kaufman
Cellular proteins that fail to fold properly result in inactive or disfunctional proteins that can have toxic functions. The unfolded protein response (UPR) is a two-tiered cellular mechanism initiated by eukaryotic cells that have accumulated misfolded proteins within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). An adaptive pathway facilitates the clearance of the undesired proteins; however, if overwhelmed, cells trigger apoptosis by upregulating transcription factors such as C/EBP-homologous protein (CHOP). A high throughput screen was performed directed at identifying compounds that selectively upregulate the apoptotic CHOP pathway while avoiding adaptive signaling cascades, resulting in a sulfonamidebenzamide chemotype that was optimized. These efforts produced a potent and selective CHOP inducer (AC50 = 0.8 μM; XBP1 > 80 μM), which was efficacious in both mouse embryonic fibroblast cells and a human oral squamous cell cancer cell line, and demonstrated antiproliferative effects for multiple cancer cell lines in the NCI-60 panel.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017
Amber L. Hackler; Stephen L. Patrick; Elizabeth W. Kahney; Daniel P. Flaherty; Elizabeth R. Sharlow; James C. Morris; Jennifer E. Golden
A sulfonamidebenzamide series was assessed for anti-kinetoplastid parasite activity based on structural similarity to the antiparasitic drug, nifurtimox. Through structure-activity optimization, derivatives with limited mammalian cell toxicity and increased potency toward African trypanosomes and Leishmania promastigotes were developed. Compound 22 had the best potency against the trypanosome (EC50=0.010μM) while several compounds showed ∼10-fold less potency against Leishmania promastigotes without impacting mammalian cells (EC50>25μM). While the chemotype originated from an unrelated optimization program aimed at selectively activating an apoptotic pathway in mammalian cancer cells, our preliminary results suggest that a distinct mechanism of action from that observed in mammalian cells is responsible for the promising activity observed in parasites.
Annual Reports in Medicinal Chemistry | 2013
Jennifer E. Golden; Jeffrey Aubé; Denise S. Simpson; Daniel P. Flaherty; Daljit S. Matharu; William Severson; Lynn Rasmussen
Archive | 2013
Daniel P. Flaherty; Jennifer E. Golden; Chunjing Liu; Michael Hedrick; Palak Gosalia; Yujie Li; Monika Milewski; Eliot Sugarman; Eigo Suyama; Kevin Nguyen; Stefan Vasile; Sumeet Salaniwal; Derek Stonich; Ying Su; Arianna Mangravita-Novo; Michael Vicchiarelli; Layton H. Smith; Jena Diwan; Thomas Dy Chung; Anthony B. Pinkerton; Jeffrey Aubé; Justin R. Miller; Danielle M. Garshott; Michael U. Callaghan; Andrew M. Fribley; Randal J. Kaufman
Archive | 2013
Jennifer E. Golden; Jeffrey Aubé; Daniel P. Flaherty; Andrew M. Fribley; Randal J. Kaufman; Thomas Dy Chung; Anthony B. Pinkerton; Michael Pablo Hendrick