Denis B. Scanlon
University of Adelaide
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Publication
Featured researches published by Denis B. Scanlon.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Bryan G. Fry; Stephen Wroe; Wouter M. Teeuwisse; Matthias J.P. van Osch; Karen Moreno; Jeanette Ingle; Colin R. McHenry; Toni L. Ferrara; Phillip D. Clausen; Holger Scheib; Kelly L. Winter; Laura Greisman; Kim Roelants; Louise van der Weerd; Christofer J. Clemente; Eleni Giannakis; Wayne C. Hodgson; Sonja Luz; Paolo Martelli; Karthiyani Krishnasamy; Elazar Kochva; Hang Fai Kwok; Denis B. Scanlon; John A. Karas; Diane M Citron; Ellie J. C. Goldstein; Judith McNaughtan; Janette A Norman
The predatory ecology of Varanus komodoensis (Komodo Dragon) has been a subject of long-standing interest and considerable conjecture. Here, we investigate the roles and potential interplay between cranial mechanics, toxic bacteria, and venom. Our analyses point to the presence of a sophisticated combined-arsenal killing apparatus. We find that the lightweight skull is relatively poorly adapted to generate high bite forces but better adapted to resist high pulling loads. We reject the popular notion regarding toxic bacteria utilization. Instead, we demonstrate that the effects of deep wounds inflicted are potentiated through venom with toxic activities including anticoagulation and shock induction. Anatomical comparisons of V. komodoensis with V. (Megalania) priscus fossils suggest that the closely related extinct giant was the largest venomous animal to have ever lived.
Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2010
Bryan G. Fry; Kim Roelants; Kelly L. Winter; Wayne C. Hodgson; Laura Griesman; Hang Fai Kwok; Denis B. Scanlon; John A. Karas; Chris Shaw; Lily Wong; Janette A Norman
The origin and evolution of venom proteins in helodermatid lizards were investigated by multidisciplinary techniques. Our analyses elucidated novel toxin types resultant from three unique domain-expression processes: 1) The first full-length sequences of lethal toxin isoforms (helofensins) revealed this toxin type to be constructed by an ancestral monodomain, monoproduct gene (beta-defensin) that underwent three tandem domain duplications to encode a tetradomain, monoproduct with a possible novel protein fold; 2) an ancestral monodomain gene (encoding a natriuretic peptide) was medially extended to become a pentadomain, pentaproduct through the additional encoding of four tandemly repeated proline-rich peptides (helokinestatins), with the five discrete peptides liberated from each other by posttranslational proteolysis; and 3) an ancestral multidomain, multiproduct gene belonging to the vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)/glucagon family being mutated to encode for a monodomain, monoproduct (exendins) followed by duplication and diversification into two variant classes (exendins 1 and 2 and exendins 3 and 4). Bioactivity characterization of exendin and helokinestatin elucidated variable cardioactivity between isoforms within each class. These results highlight the importance of utilizing evolutionary-based search strategies for biodiscovery and the virtually unexplored potential of lizard venoms in drug design and discovery.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2010
Brett M. Paterson; John A. Karas; Denis B. Scanlon; Jonathan M. White; Paul S. Donnelly
New bifunctional derivatives of diacetyl-bis(4-methylthiosemicarbazone) (H(2)atsm) have been prepared by a selective transamination reaction of a new dissymmetric bis(thiosemicarbazone) precursor H(2)L(1). The new derivatives contain an aliphatic carboxylic acid (H(2)L(2) and H(2)L(3)), t-butyl carbamate (H(2)L(4)), or ammonium ion (H(2)L(5)) functional group. The new ligands and copper(II) complexes have been characterized by NMR spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, and microanalysis. The complex Cu(II)(L(4)) was structurally characterized by X-ray crystallography and shows the metal center to be in an N(2)S(2) distorted square planar coordination geometry. Electrochemical measurements show that the copper(II) complexes undergo a reversible reduction attributable to a Cu(II)/Cu(I) process. The ligands and the copper(II) complexes featuring a carboxylic acid functional group have been conjugated to the tumor targeting peptide bombesin(7-14)-NH(2). The bifunctional peptide conjugates were radiolabeled with copper-64 in the interest of developing new positron emission tomography (PET) imaging agents. The conjugates were radiolabeled with copper-64 rapidly in high radiochemical purity (>95%) at room temperature under mild conditions and were stable in a cysteine and histidine challenge study.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Karen S. Harris; Joanne L. Casey; Andrew M. Coley; John A. Karas; Jennifer K. Sabo; Yen Yee Tan; Olan Dolezal; Raymond S. Norton; Andrew B. Hughes; Denis B. Scanlon; Michael Foley
Apical membrane antigen 1 (AMA1) of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum has been implicated in the invasion of host erythrocytes and is an important vaccine candidate. We have previously described a 20-residue peptide, R1, that binds to AMA1 and subsequently blocks parasite invasion. Because this peptide appears to target a site critical for AMA1 function, it represents an important lead compound for anti-malarial drug development. However, the effectiveness of this peptide inhibitor was limited to a subset of parasite isolates, indicating a requirement for broader strain specificity. Furthermore, a barrier to the utility of any peptide as a potential therapeutic is its susceptibility to rapid proteolytic degradation. In this study, we sought to improve the proteolytic stability and AMA1 binding properties of the R1 peptide by systematic methylation of backbone amides (N-methylation). The inclusion of a single N-methyl group in the R1 peptide backbone dramatically increased AMA1 affinity, bioactivity, and proteolytic stability without introducing global structural alterations. In addition, N-methylation of multiple R1 residues further improved these properties. Therefore, we have shown that modifications to a biologically active peptide can dramatically enhance activity. This approach could be applied to many lead peptides or peptide therapeutics to simultaneously optimize a number of parameters.
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2010
Bryan G. Fry; Kelly L. Winter; Janette A Norman; Kim Roelants; Rob J.A. Nabuurs; Matthias J.P. van Osch; Wouter M. Teeuwisse; Louise van der Weerd; Judith McNaughtan; Hang Fai Kwok; Holger Scheib; Laura Greisman; Elazar Kochva; Laurence J. Miller; Fan Gao; John A. Karas; Denis B. Scanlon; Feng Lin; Sanjaya Kuruppu; Chris Shaw; Lily Wong; Wayne C. Hodgson
Venom has only been recently discovered to be a basal trait of the Anguimorpha lizards. Consequently, very little is known about the timings of toxin recruitment events, venom protein molecular evolution, or even the relative physical diversifications of the venom system itself. A multidisciplinary approach was used to examine the evolution across the full taxonomical range of this ∼130 million-year-old clade. Analysis of cDNA libraries revealed complex venom transcriptomes. Most notably, three new cardioactive peptide toxin types were discovered (celestoxin, cholecystokinin, and YY peptides). The latter two represent additional examples of convergent use of genes in toxic arsenals, both having previously been documented as components of frog skin defensive chemical secretions. Two other novel venom gland-overexpressed modified versions of other protein frameworks were also recovered from the libraries (epididymal secretory protein and ribonuclease). Lectin, hyaluronidase, and veficolin toxin types were sequenced for the first time from lizard venoms and shown to be homologous to the snake venom forms. In contrast, phylogenetic analyses demonstrated that the lizard natriuretic peptide toxins were recruited independently of the form in snake venoms. The de novo evolution of helokinestatin peptide toxin encoding domains within the lizard venom natriuretic gene was revealed to be exclusive to the helodermatid/anguid subclade. New isoforms were sequenced for cysteine-rich secretory protein, kallikrein, and phospholipase A2 toxins. Venom gland morphological analysis revealed extensive evolutionary tinkering. Anguid glands are characterized by thin capsules and mixed glands, serous at the bottom of the lobule and mucous toward the apex. Twice, independently this arrangement was segregated into specialized serous protein-secreting glands with thick capsules with the mucous lobules now distinct (Heloderma and the Lanthanotus/Varanus clade). The results obtained highlight the importance of utilizing evolution-based search strategies for biodiscovery and emphasize the largely untapped drug design and development potential of lizard venoms.
Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2008
Fazel Shabanpoor; Richard A. Hughes; Ross A. D. Bathgate; Suode Zhang; Denis B. Scanlon; Feng Lin; Mohammed Akhter Hossain; Frances Separovic; John D. Wade
An efficient solid-phase synthesis protocol has been developed which, together with regioselective sequential formation of the three disulfide bonds, enabled the preparation of specifically monolanthanide (europium)-labeled human insulin-like peptide 3 (INSL3) for the study of its interaction with its G-protein-coupled receptor, RXFP2, via time-resolved fluorometry. A commercially available chelator, diethylene triamine pentaacetic acid (DTPA), was coupled to the N-terminus of the INSL3 A-chain on the solid phase, and then a coordination complex between europium ion and DTPA was formed using EuCl 3 to protect the chelator from production of an unidentified adduct during subsequent combination of the A- and B-chains. The labeled peptide was purified in high yield using high-performance liquid chromatography with nearly neutral pH buffers to prevent the liberation of Eu (3+) from the chelator. Using time-resolved fluorometry, saturation binding assays were undertaken to determine the binding affinity (p K d) of labeled INSL3 for RXFP2 in HEK-293T cells stably expressing RXFP2. The dissociation constant of DTPA-labeled INSL3 (9.05 +/- 0.03, n = 3) that was obtained from saturation binding experiments was comparable to that of (125)I-labeled INSL3 (9.59 +/- 0.09, n = 3). The receptor binding affinity (p K i) of human INSL3 was determined to be 9.27 +/- 0.06, n = 3, using Eu-DTPA-INSL3 as a labeled ligand, which again is similar to that obtained when (125)I-INSL3 was used as labeled ligand (9.34 +/- 0.02, n = 4). This novel lanthanide-coordinated, DTPA-labeled INSL3 has excellent sensitivity, stability, and high specific activity, properties that will be particularly beneficial in high-throughput screening of INSL3 analogues in structure-activity studies.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2011
Michelle T. Ma; Margaret S. Cooper; Rowena L. Paul; Karen Shaw; John A. Karas; Denis B. Scanlon; Jonathan M. White; Philip J. Blower; Paul S. Donnelly
The synthesis of new cage amine macrobicyclic ligands with pendent carboxylate functional groups designed for application in copper radiopharmaceuticals is described. Reaction of [Cu((NH(2))(2)sar)](2+) (sar = 3,6,10,13,16,19-hexaazabicyclo[6.6.6]icosane) with either succinic or glutaric anhydride results in selective acylation of the primary amine atoms of [Cu((NH(2))(2)sar)](2+) to give derivatives with either one or two aliphatic carboxylate functional groups separated from the cage amine framework by either a four- or five-atom linker. The Cu(II) serves to protect the secondary amine nitrogen atoms from acylation, and can be removed to give the free ligands. The newly appended carboxylate functional groups can be used as sites of attachment for cancer-targeting peptides such as Lys(3)-bombesin. The synthesis of the first dimeric sarcophagine-peptide conjugate, possessing two Lys(3)-bombesin peptides tethered to a single cage amine, is presented. This species has been radiolabeled with copper-64 at ambient temperature and there is minimal dissociation of Cu(II) from the conjugate even after two days of incubation in human serum.
Chemical Communications | 2009
Michelle T. Ma; John A. Karas; Jonathan M. White; Denis B. Scanlon; Paul S. Donnelly
A new sarcophagine cage amine ligand with a pendent carboxylate functional group has been synthesised; the ligand has been conjugated to tumour targeting peptides ([Tyr3]-octreotate and [Lys3]-bombesin) and the conjugates radiolabelled with copper-64.
Biomaterials | 2011
Marie N. Bongiovanni; Denis B. Scanlon; Sally L. Gras
Peptide self-assembly offers a route for the production of fibrous nanomaterials with advanced bioactive properties that promote specific cell interactions. In this study the peptide TTR1-cycloRGDfK was designed to form amyloid-like fibrils that display the functional cyclic RGDfK pentapeptide ligand to target mammalian cell surface α(V)β₃ integrin receptors. The TTR₁₀₅₋₁₁₅ (or TTR1) sequence was used as the self-assembling domain. Once assembled, TTR1-cycloRGDfK fibrils display a characteristic cross-β core structure by X-ray fibre diffraction that was preserved following dehydration. Thin films of fibrils were characterised by infrared synchrotron mapping, scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy. Cell adhesion and spreading were promoted on thin films of TTR1-cycloRGDfK fibrils via specific interactions with the cyclic RGDfK ligand. Low levels of non-specific interactions were also observed between cells and non-functionalised fibrils. TTR1-cycloRGDfK fibrils are an advance on bioactive fibrils previously designed to interact with a range of RGD binding integrins and our findings show that the assembly of amyloid-like fibrils based on the TTR1 sequence is robust and can be directed to form materials with specific properties.
Chemical Communications | 2012
Jingxian Yu; Ondrej Zvarec; David M. Huang; Mark A. Bissett; Denis B. Scanlon; Joseph G. Shapter; Andrew D. Abell
The mechanism of electron transfer in α-aminoisobutyric (Aib) homoligomers is defined by the extent of secondary structure, rather than just chain length. Helical structures (Aib units ≥3) undergo an electron hopping mechanism, while shorter disordered sequences (Aib units <3) undergo an electron superexchange mechanism.