Daniel Robert Gentry
GlaxoSmithKline
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Publication
Featured researches published by Daniel Robert Gentry.
Nature | 2010
Benjamin D. Bax; Pan F. Chan; Drake S. Eggleston; Andrew Fosberry; Daniel Robert Gentry; Fabrice Gorrec; Ilaria Giordano; Michael M. Hann; Alan Joseph Hennessy; Martin Hibbs; Jianzhong Huang; Emma Jones; Jo Jones; Kristin K. Brown; Ceri Lewis; Earl W. May; Martin R. Saunders; Onkar M. P. Singh; Claus Spitzfaden; Carol Shen; Anthony Shillings; Andrew J. Theobald; Alexandre Wohlkonig; Neil David Pearson; Michael N. Gwynn
Despite the success of genomics in identifying new essential bacterial genes, there is a lack of sustainable leads in antibacterial drug discovery to address increasing multidrug resistance. Type IIA topoisomerases cleave and religate DNA to regulate DNA topology and are a major class of antibacterial and anticancer drug targets, yet there is no well developed structural basis for understanding drug action. Here we report the 2.1 Å crystal structure of a potent, new class, broad-spectrum antibacterial agent in complex with Staphylococcus aureus DNA gyrase and DNA, showing a new mode of inhibition that circumvents fluoroquinolone resistance in this clinically important drug target. The inhibitor ‘bridges’ the DNA and a transient non-catalytic pocket on the two-fold axis at the GyrA dimer interface, and is close to the active sites and fluoroquinolone binding sites. In the inhibitor complex the active site seems poised to cleave the DNA, with a single metal ion observed between the TOPRIM (topoisomerase/primase) domain and the scissile phosphate. This work provides new insights into the mechanism of topoisomerase action and a platform for structure-based drug design of a new class of antibacterial agents against a clinically proven, but conformationally flexible, enzyme class.
EMBO Reports | 2003
James R. Brown; Daniel Robert Gentry; Julie A. Becker; Karen A. Ingraham; David J. Holmes; Michael J. Stanhope
The screening of new antibiotics against several bacterial strains often reveals unexpected occurrences of natural drug resistance. Two examples of this involve specific inhibitors of Staphylococcus aureus isoleucyl‐transfer‐RNA synthetase 1 (IleRS1) and, more recently, Streptococcus pneumoniae methionyl‐tRNA synthetase 1 (MetRS1). In both cases, resistance is due to the presence of a second gene that encodes another synthetase (IleRS2 or MetRS2). Here, we show that both S. pneumoniae MetRS2 and S. aureus IleRS2 have closely related homologues in the Gram‐positive bacterium Bacillus anthracis, the causative agent of anthrax. Furthermore, similar to drug‐resistant pathogens, strains of B. anthracis and its closest relative, B. cereus, also have wild‐type ileS1 and metS1 genes. Clostridium perfringens, the causative agent of gangrene, also has two metS genes, whereas Oceanobacillus iheyensis isolated from deep‐sea sediments has a single ileS2‐type gene. This study shows the importance of understanding complex evolutionary networks of ancient horizontal gene transfer for the development of novel antibiotics.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2013
Thomas Lewandowski; Jianzhong Huang; Frank Fan; Shannon Rogers; Daniel Robert Gentry; Reannon Holland; Peter DeMarsh; Kelly Aubart; Magdalena Zalacain
ABSTRACT Inhibitors of peptide deformylase (PDF) represent a new class of antibacterial agents with a novel mechanism of action. Mutations that inactivate formyl methionyl transferase (FMT), the enzyme that formylates initiator methionyl-tRNA, lead to an alternative initiation of protein synthesis that does not require deformylation and are the predominant cause of resistance to PDF inhibitors in Staphylococcus aureus. Here, we report that loss-of-function mutations in FMT impart pleiotropic effects that include a reduced growth rate, a nonhemolytic phenotype, and a drastic reduction in production of multiple extracellular proteins, including key virulence factors, such as α-hemolysin and Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL), that have been associated with S. aureus pathogenicity. Consequently, S. aureus FMT mutants are greatly attenuated in neutropenic and nonneutropenic murine pyelonephritis infection models and show very high survival rates compared with wild-type S. aureus. These newly discovered effects on extracellular virulence factor production demonstrate that FMT-null mutants have a more severe fitness cost than previously anticipated, leading to a substantial loss of pathogenicity and a restricted ability to produce an invasive infection.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2002
Richard L. Jarvest; John M. Berge; Valerie Berry; Helen F. Boyd; Murray J.B. Brown; John Stephen Elder; Andrew Keith Forrest; Andrew Fosberry; Daniel Robert Gentry; Martin Hibbs; Deborah D. Jaworski; Peter J. O'Hanlon; Andrew J. Pope; Stephen Rittenhouse; Robert J. Sheppard; Courtney Slater-Radosti; Angela Worby
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Sanjay S. Khandekar; Daniel Robert Gentry; Glenn S. Van Aller; Patrick Vernon Warren; Hong Xiang; Carol Silverman; Michael L. Doyle; Pamela A. Chambers; Alex K. Konstantinidis; Martin Brandt; Robert A. Daines; John T. Lonsdale
Archive | 1997
Daniel Robert Gentry; Rebecca Claire Greenwood; Elizabeth J. SmithKline Beecham Pharma. Lawlor
Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2010
Daniel Robert Gentry; Imogen Wilding; John Johnson; Dongzhao Chen; Katja Remlinger; Cindy Richards; Susan Neill; Magdalena Zalacain; Stephen Rittenhouse; Michael N. Gwynn
The Journal of Antibiotics | 2002
Rebecca Claire Greenwood; Daniel Robert Gentry
Fems Microbiology Letters | 2002
Rebecca Claire Greenwood; Daniel Robert Gentry
Archive | 1997
Daniel Robert Gentry; Rebecca Claire Greenwood; Elizabeth Jane Lawlor