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Dive into the research topics where Debananda Das is active.

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Featured researches published by Debananda Das.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Structural and Molecular Interactions of CCR5 Inhibitors with CCR5

Kenji Maeda; Debananda Das; Hiromi Ogata-Aoki; Hirotomo Nakata; Toshikazu Miyakawa; Yasushi Tojo; Rachael Norman; Yoshikazu Takaoka; Jianping Ding; Gail Ferstandig Arnold; Eddy Arnold; Hiroaki Mitsuya

We have characterized the structural and molecular interactions of CC-chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) with three CCR5 inhibitors active against R5 human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) including the potent in vitro and in vivo CCR5 inhibitor aplaviroc (AVC). The data obtained with saturation binding assays and structural analyses delineated the key interactions responsible for the binding of CCR5 inhibitors with CCR5 and illustrated that their binding site is located in a predominantly lipophilic pocket in the interface of extracellular loops and within the upper transmembrane (TM) domain of CCR5. Mutations in the CCR5 binding sites of AVC decreased gp120 binding to CCR5 and the susceptibility to HIV-1 infection, although mutations in TM4 and TM5 that also decreased gp120 binding and HIV-1 infectivity had less effects on the binding of CC-chemokines, suggesting that CCR5 inhibition targeting appropriate regions might render the inhibition highly HIV-1-specific while preserving the CC chemokine-CCR5 interactions. The present data delineating residue by residue interactions of CCR5 with CCR5 inhibitors should not only help design more potent and more HIV-1-specific CCR5 inhibitors, but also give new insights into the dynamics of CC-chemokine-CCR5 interactions and the mechanisms of CCR5 involvement in the process of cellular entry of HIV-1.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2002

Optimization of quantum mechanical molecular mechanical partitioning schemes: Gaussian delocalization of molecular mechanical charges and the double link atom method

Debananda Das; Kirsten P. Eurenius; Eric M. Billings; Paul Sherwood; David C. Chatfield; Milan Hodoscek; Bernard R. Brooks

Two new techniques for modeling chemical processes in condensed phases with combined quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical (QM/MM) potentials are introduced and tested on small, model compounds. The first technique, the double link atom (DLA) method, is an extension of the traditional, single link atom (SLA) method to avoid some of the problems with the latter method. These problems are primarily electrostatic, as the SLA method can produce an unphysical overall charge or dipole. The second technique, the delocalized Gaussian MM charge (DGMM) method, is an empirical way to include the delocalized character of the electron density of atoms in the MM region. This can be important for the electrostatic interaction of the QM region with nearby atoms in the MM region, and it can simplify the rules governing which classical interactions are included in the energies and forces. Even for very short distances, the DGMM method does not require the neglect of the MM host in the QM calculation. The DGMM method ...


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Potent inhibition of HIV-1 replication by novel non-peptidyl small molecule inhibitors of protease dimerization.

Yasuhiro Koh; Shintaro Matsumi; Debananda Das; Masayuki Amano; David A. Davis; Jianfeng Li; Sofiya Leschenko; Abigail Baldridge; Tatsuo Shioda; Robert Yarchoan; Arun K. Ghosh; Hiroaki Mitsuya

Dimerization of HIV-1 protease subunits is essential for its proteolytic activity, which plays a critical role in HIV-1 replication. Hence, the inhibition of protease dimerization represents a unique target for potential intervention of HIV-1. We developed an intermolecular fluorescence resonance energy transfer-based HIV-1-expression assay employing cyan and yellow fluorescent protein-tagged protease monomers. Using this assay, we identified non-peptidyl small molecule inhibitors of protease dimerization. These inhibitors, including darunavir and two experimental protease inhibitors, blocked protease dimerization at concentrations of as low as 0.01 μm and blocked HIV-1 replication with IC50 values of 0.0002-0.48 μm. These agents also inhibited the proteolytic activity of mature protease. Other approved anti-HIV-1 agents examined except tipranavir, a CCR5 inhibitor, and soluble CD4 failed to block the dimerization event. Once protease monomers dimerize to become mature protease, mature protease is not dissociated by this dimerization inhibition mechanism, suggesting that these agents block dimerization at the nascent stage of protease maturation. The proteolytic activity of mature protease that managed to undergo dimerization despite the presence of these agents is likely to be inhibited by the same agents acting as conventional protease inhibitors. Such a dual inhibition mechanism should lead to highly potent inhibition of HIV-1.


Journal of Virology | 2010

In Vitro Selection of Highly Darunavir-Resistant and Replication-Competent HIV-1 Variants by Using a Mixture of Clinical HIV-1 Isolates Resistant to Multiple Conventional Protease Inhibitors

Yasuhiro Koh; Masayuki Amano; Tomomi Towata; Matthew Danish; Sofiya Leshchenko-Yashchuk; Debananda Das; Maki Nakayama; Yasushi Tojo; Arun K. Ghosh; Hiroaki Mitsuya

ABSTRACT We attempted to select HIV-1 variants resistant to darunavir (DRV), which potently inhibits the enzymatic activity and dimerization of protease and has a high genetic barrier to HIV-1 development of resistance to DRV. We conducted selection using a mixture of 8 highly multi-protease inhibitor (PI)-resistant, DRV-susceptible clinical HIV-1 variants (HIV-1MIX) containing 9 to 14 PI resistance-associated amino acid substitutions in protease. HIV-1MIX became highly resistant to DRV, with a 50% effective concentration (EC50) ∼333-fold greater than that against HIV-1NL4-3. HIV-1MIX at passage 51 (HIV-1MIXP51) replicated well in the presence of 5 μM DRV and contained 14 mutations. HIV-1MIXP51 was highly resistant to amprenavir, indinavir, nelfinavir, ritonavir, lopinavir, and atazanavir and moderately resistant to saquinavir and tipranavir. HIV-1MIXP51 had a resemblance with HIV-1C of the HIV-1MIX population, and selection using HIV-1C was also performed; however, its DRV resistance acquisition was substantially delayed. The H219Q and I223V substitutions in Gag, lacking in HIV-1CP51, likely contributed to conferring a replication advantage on HIV-1MIXP51 by reducing intravirion cyclophilin A content. HIV-1MIXP51 apparently acquired the substitutions from another HIV-1 strain(s) of HIV-1MIX through possible homologous recombination. The present data suggest that the use of multiple drug-resistant HIV-1 isolates is of utility in selecting drug-resistant variants and that DRV would not easily permit HIV-1 to develop significant resistance; however, HIV-1 can develop high levels of DRV resistance when a variety of PI-resistant HIV-1 strains are generated, as seen in patients experiencing sequential PI failure, and ensuing homologous recombination takes place. HIV-1MIXP51 should be useful in elucidating the mechanisms of HIV-1 resistance to DRV and related agents.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2007

A Novel Bis-Tetrahydrofuranylurethane-Containing Nonpeptidic Protease Inhibitor (PI), GRL-98065, Is Potent against Multiple-PI-Resistant Human Immunodeficiency Virus In Vitro

Masayuki Amano; Yasuhiro Koh; Debananda Das; Jianfeng Li; Sofiya Leschenko; Yuan Fang Wang; Péter Boross; Irene T. Weber; Arun K. Ghosh; Hiroaki Mitsuya

ABSTRACT We designed, synthesized, and identified GRL-98065, a novel nonpeptidic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease inhibitor (PI) containing the structure-based designed privileged cyclic ether-derived nonpeptide P2 ligand, 3(R),3a(S),6a(R)-bis-tetrahydrofuranylurethane (bis-THF), and a sulfonamide isostere, which is highly potent against laboratory HIV-1 strains and primary clinical isolates (50% effective concentration [EC50], 0.0002 to 0.0005 μM) with minimal cytotoxicity (50% cytotoxicity, 35.7 μM in CD4+ MT-2 cells). GRL-98065 blocked the infectivity and replication of each of the HIV-1NL4-3 variants exposed to and selected by up to a 5 μM concentration of saquinavir, indinavir, nelfinavir, or ritonavir and a 1 μM concentration of lopinavir or atazanavir (EC50, 0.0015 to 0.0075 μM), although it was less active against HIV-1NL4-3 selected by amprenavir (EC50, 0.032 μM). GRL-98065 was also potent against multiple-PI-resistant clinical HIV-1 variants isolated from patients who had no response to existing antiviral regimens after having received a variety of antiviral agents, HIV-1 isolates of various subtypes, and HIV-2 isolates examined. Structural analyses revealed that the close contact of GRL-98065 with the main chain of the protease active-site amino acids (Asp29 and Asp30) is important for its potency and wide-spectrum activity against multiple-PI-resistant HIV-1 variants. The present data demonstrate that the privileged nonpeptide P2 ligand, bis-THF, is critical for the binding of GRL-98065 to the HIV protease substrate binding site and that this scaffold can confer highly potent antiviral activity against a wide spectrum of HIV isolates.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Altered HIV-1 Gag Protein Interactions with Cyclophilin A (CypA) on the Acquisition of H219Q and H219P Substitutions in the CypA Binding Loop

Hiroyuki Gatanaga; Debananda Das; Yasuhiro Suzuki; Damaris D. Yeh; Khaja Azhar Hussain; Arun K. Ghosh; Hiroaki Mitsuya

HIV-1 Gag protein interaction with cyclophilin A (CypA) is critical for viral fitness. Among the amino acid substitutions identified in Gag noncleavage sites in HIV-1 variants resistant to protease inhibitors, H219Q (Gatanaga, H., Suzuki, Y., Tsang, H., Yoshimura, K., Kavlick, M. F., Nagashima, K., Gorelick, R. J., Mardy, S., Tang, C., Summers, M. F., and Mitsuya, H. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 5952-5961) and H219P substitutions in the viral CypA binding loop confer the greatest replication advantage to HIV-1. These substitutions represent polymorphic amino acid residues. We found that the replication advantage conferred by these substitutions was far greater in CypA-rich MT-2 and H9 cells than in Jurkat cells and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBM), both of which contained less CypA. High intracellular CypA content in H9 and MT-2 cells, resulting in excessive CypA levels in virions, limited wild-type HIV-1 (HIV-1WT) replication and H219Q introduction into HIV-1 (HIV-1H219Q), reduced CypA incorporation of HIV-1, and potentiated viral replication. H219Q introduction also restored the otherwise compromised replication of HIV-1P222A in PBM, although the CypA content in HIV-1H219Q/P222A was comparable with that in HIV-1P222A, suggesting that H219Q affected the conformation of the CypA-binding motif, rendering HIV-1 replicative in a low CypA environment. Structural modeling analyses revealed that although hydrogen bonds are lost with H219Q and H219P substitutions, no significant distortion of the CypA binding loop of Gag occurred. The loop conformation of HIV-1P222A was found highly distorted, although H219Q introduction to HIV-1 restored the conformation of the loop close to that of HIV-1 P222A. The present data suggested that the effect of CypA on HIV-1 replicative WT ability is bimodal (both high and low CypA content limits HIV-1 replication), that the conformation of the CypA binding region of Gag is important for viral fitness, and that the function of CypA is to maintain the conformation.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2009

Prediction of potency of protease inhibitors using free energy simulations with polarizable quantum mechanics-based ligand charges and a hybrid water model.

Debananda Das; Yasuhiro Koh; Yasushi Tojo; Arun K. Ghosh; Hiroaki Mitsuya

Reliable and robust prediction of the binding affinity for drug molecules continues to be a daunting challenge. We simulated the binding interactions and free energy of binding of nine protease inhibitors (PIs) with wild-type and various mutant proteases by performing GBSA simulations in which each PIs partial charge was determined by quantum mechanics (QM) and the partial charge accounts for the polarization induced by the protease environment. We employed a hybrid solvation model that retains selected explicit water molecules in the protein with surface-generalized Born (SGB) implicit solvent. We examined the correlation of the free energy with the antiviral potency of PIs with regard to amino acid substitutions in protease. The GBSA free energy thus simulated showed strong correlations (r > 0.75) with antiviral IC(50) values of PIs when amino acid substitutions were present in the protease active site. We also simulated the binding free energy of PIs with P2-bis-tetrahydrofuranylurethane (bis-THF) or related cores, utilizing a bis-THF-containing protease crystal structure as a template. The free energy showed a strong correlation (r = 0.93) with experimentally determined anti-HIV-1 potency. The present data suggest that the presence of selected explicit water in protein and protein polarization-induced quantum charges for the inhibitor, compared to lack of explicit water and a static force-field-based charge model, can serve as an improved lead optimization tool and warrants further exploration.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2006

Overcoming HIV drug resistance through rational drug design based on molecular, biochemical, and structural profiles of HIV resistance

Philip D. Yin; Debananda Das; Hiroaki Mitsuya

Abstract.There are 20 available drugs for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. With a single exception, all of these drugs inhibit either HIV reverse transcriptase or protease. Reverse transcriptase inhibitors can be further categorized as nucleoside/nucleotide analogs or non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. Resistance that has emerged against all available antiretroviral drugs represents a major challenge in the therapy of HIV infection. Nevertheless, extensive analysis of the molecular and structural mechanisms by which such mutations confer resistance has accumulated over the years. This understanding has driven the development and refinement of novel compounds capable of maintaining antiviral activity against both wild-type and drug-resistant HIV strains. The molecular, biochemical, and structural profiles of reverse transcriptase inhibitor and protease inhibitor resistance are discussed. In addition, how this knowledge has been utilized to generate a new generation of antiviral drugs with activity against drug-resistant HIV is reviewed.


Advances in pharmacology | 2008

Development of Protease Inhibitors and the Fight with Drug-Resistant HIV-1 Variants

Hiroaki Mitsuya; Kenji Maeda; Debananda Das; Arun K. Ghosh

Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the principle and utility of development of protease inhibitors (PIs) and the challenges in the fight with emergence of PI‐resistant human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)‐1 variants. Successful antiviral drugs, in theory, exert their virus‐specific effects without disturbing cellular metabolism or function. However, at present, no antiretroviral drugs or agents are likely to be completely specific for HIV‐1 or to be devoid of toxicity or side effects that has been a critical issue because patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) and its related diseases will have to receive antiretroviral therapy for a long period of time, perhaps for the rest of their lives. Thus, the identification of new class of antiretroviral drugs that have a unique mechanism(s) of action and produce no or minimal side effects remains an important therapeutic objective. A variety of novel anti‐HIV‐1 agents that target different steps in the HIV replication cycle are currently in preclinical trials and will undoubtedly improve the ability to manage HIV‐1 infection when they are duly introduced into clinics.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2009

GRL-02031, a novel nonpeptidic protease inhibitor (PI) containing a stereochemically defined fused cyclopentanyltetrahydrofuran potent against multi-PI-resistant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 in vitro.

Yasuhiro Koh; Debananda Das; Sofiya Leschenko; Hirotomo Nakata; Hiromi Ogata-Aoki; Masayuki Amano; Maki Nakayama; Arun K. Ghosh; Hiroaki Mitsuya

ABSTRACT We generated a novel nonpeptidic protease inhibitor (PI), GRL-02031, by incorporating a stereochemically defined fused cyclopentanyltetrahydrofuran (Cp-THF) which exerted potent activity against a wide spectrum of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) isolates, including multidrug-resistant HIV-1 variants. GRL-02031 was highly potent against laboratory HIV-1 strains and primary clinical isolates, including subtypes A, B, C, and E (50% effective concentration [EC50] range, 0.015 to 0.038 μM), with minimal cytotoxicity (50% cytotoxic concentration, >100 μM in CD4+ MT-2 cells), although it was less active against two HIV-2 strains (HIV-2EHO and HIV-2ROD) (EC50, ∼0.60 μM) than against HIV-1 strains. GRL-02031 at relatively low concentrations blocked the infection and replication of each of the HIV-1NL4-3 variants exposed to and selected by up to 5 μM of saquinavir, amprenavir, indinavir, nelfinavir, or ritonavir and 1 μM of lopinavir or atazanavir (EC50 range, 0.036 to 0.14 μM). GRL-02031 was also potent against multi-PI-resistant clinical HIV-1 variants isolated from patients who had no response to the conventional antiretroviral regimens that then existed, with EC50s ranging from 0.014 to 0.042 μM (changes in the EC50s were less than twofold the EC50 for wild-type HIV-1). Upon selection of HIV-1NL4-3 in the presence of GRL-02031, mutants carrying L10F, L33F, M46I, I47V, Q58E, V82I, I84V, and I85V in the protease-encoding region and G62R (within p17), L363M (p24-p2 cleavage site), R409K (within p7), and I437T (p7-p1 cleavage site) in the gag-encoding region emerged. GRL-02031 was potent against a variety of HIV-1NL4-3-based molecular infectious clones containing a single primary mutation reported previously or a combination of such mutations, although it was slightly less active against HIV-1 variants containing consecutive amino acid substitutions: M46I and I47V or I84V and I85V. Structural modeling analysis demonstrated a distinct bimodal binding of GRL-02031 to protease, which may provide advantages to GRL-02031 in blocking the replication of a wide spectrum of HIV-1 variants resistant to PIs and in delaying the development of resistance of HIV-1 to GRL-02031. The present data warrant the further development of GRL-02031 as a potential therapeutic agent for the treatment of infections with primary and multidrug-resistant HIV-1 variants.

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Kenji Maeda

National Institutes of Health

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Yuki Takamatsu

National Institutes of Health

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