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Dive into the research topics where Denis M. Daigle is active.

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Featured researches published by Denis M. Daigle.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

High throughput screening identifies novel inhibitors of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase that are competitive with dihydrofolate

Michela Zolli-Juran; Jonathan D. Cechetto; Rebecca Hartlen; Denis M. Daigle; Eric D. Brown

This communication describes the high-throughput screen of a diverse library of 50,000 small molecules against Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase to detect inhibitors. Sixty-two compounds were identified as having significant inhibitory activity against the enzyme. Secondary screening of these revealed twelve molecules that were competitive with dihydrofolate, nine of which have not been previously characterized as inhibitors of dihydrofolate reductase. These novel molecules ranged in potency (K(i)) from 26 nM to 11 microM and may represent fresh starting points for new small molecule therapeutics directed against dihydrofolate reductase.


Biochemical Journal | 2005

Characterization of the Bacillus subtilis GTPase YloQ and its role in ribosome function

Tracey L. Campbell; Denis M. Daigle; Eric D. Brown

We present an analysis of the cellular phenotype and biochemical activity of a conserved bacterial GTPase of unknown function (YloQ and YjeQ in Bacillus subtilis and Escherichia coli respectively) using a collection of antibiotics of diverse mechanisms and chemical classes. We created a yloQ deletion strain, which exhibited a slow growth phenotype and formed chains of filamentous cells. Additionally, we constructed a conditional mutant in yloQ, where growth was dependent on inducible expression from a complementing copy of the gene. In phenotypic studies, depletion of yloQ sensitized cells to antibiotics that bind at the peptide channel or peptidyl transferase centre, providing the first chemical genetic evidence linking this GTPase to ribosome function. Additional experiments using these small-molecule probes in vitro revealed that aminoglycoside antibiotics severely affected a previously characterized ribosome-associated GTPase activity of purified, recombinant YjeQ from E. coli. None of the antibiotics tested competed with YjeQ for binding to 30 or 70 S ribosomes. A closer examination of YloQ depletion revealed that the polyribosome profiles were altered and that decreased expression of YloQ led to the accumulation of ribosomal subunits at the expense of intact 70 S ribosomes. The present study provides the first evidence showing that YloQ/YjeQ may be involved in several areas of cellular metabolism, including cell division and ribosome function.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2009

Fmt Bypass in Pseudomonas aeruginosa Causes Induction of MexXY Efflux Pump Expression

Ruth E. Caughlan; Shubha Sriram; Denis M. Daigle; Angela L. Woods; Jennifer Buco; Ron L. Peterson; JoAnn Dzink-Fox; Susan Walker; Charles R. Dean

ABSTRACT The intrinsic resistance of P. aeruginosa PAO1 to the peptide deformylase inhibitor (PDF-I) LBM415 was mediated by the MexAB-OprM and MexXY-OprM efflux pumps, the latter of which was strongly induced by LBM415. Single-step exposure of PAO1 deleted for mexAB-oprM (therefore lacking both MexAB-OprM and MexXY-OprM functions) to PDF-Is selected for nfxB mutants, which express the MexCD-OprJ efflux pump, indicating that these compounds are also substrates for this pump. Selection of resistant mutants by use of levels of LBM415 greater than that accommodated by efflux yielded two additional groups of mutations, in the methionyl-tRNAfmet formyltransferase (fmt) and folD genes. Both mechanisms are known to impose an in vitro growth deficit (also observed here), presumably due to impairment of protein synthesis. We surmised that this inherent impairment of protein synthesis would upregulate expression of mexXY in a fashion similar to upregulation by LBM415 or by ribosome inhibitory compounds. Transcriptional profiling and/or mexX::lux promoter fusion analysis revealed that fmt and folD mutants were strongly upregulated for mexXY and another gene known to be required for upregulation of the pump, PA5471. Complementation of the fmt mutation in trans reversed this constitutive expression. This supports the notion that MexXY has a natural physiological function responding to impairment of ribosome function or protein synthesis and that fmt mutation (Fmt bypass) and folD mutation generate the intracellular mexXY-inducing signal.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2007

Reduced susceptibility of Haemophilus influenzae to the peptide deformylase inhibitor LBM415 can result from target protein overexpression due to amplified chromosomal def gene copy number.

Charles R. Dean; Shubha Narayan; Joel Richards; Denis M. Daigle; Stacy Esterow; Jennifer A. Leeds; Heather Kamp; Xiaoling Puyang; Brigitte Wiedmann; Dieter Mueller; Hans Voshol; Jan van Oostrum; Daniel Wall; James Koehn; JoAnn Dzink-Fox; Neil S. Ryder

ABSTRACT Previous genetic analysis of Haemophilus influenzae revealed two mechanisms associated with decreased susceptibility to the novel peptide deformylase inhibitor LBM415: AcrAB-TolC-mediated efflux and Fmt bypass, resulting from mutations in the pump repressor gene acrR and in the fmt gene, respectively. We have isolated an additional mutant, CDS23 (LBM415 MIC, 64 μg/ml versus 4 μg/ml against the parent strain NB65044) that lacks mutations in the acrR or fmt structural genes or in the gene encoding Def, the intracellular target of LBM415. Western immunoblot analysis, two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, and tryptic digestion combined with mass spectrometric identification showed that the Def protein was highly overexpressed in the mutant strain. Consistent with this, real-time reverse transcription-PCR revealed a significant increase in def transcript titer. No mutations were found in the region upstream of def that might account for altered expression; however, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis suggested that a genetic rearrangement of the region containing def had occurred. Using a combination of PCR, sequencing, and Southern blot analyses, it was determined that the def gene had undergone copy number amplification, explaining the high level of target protein expression. Inactivation of the AcrAB-TolC efflux pump in this mutant increased susceptibility 16-fold, highlighting the role of efflux in exacerbating the overall reduced susceptibility resulting from target overexpression.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2004

Studies of the Interaction of Escherichia coli YjeQ with the Ribosome In Vitro

Denis M. Daigle; Eric D. Brown


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Inhibition of Aminoglycoside Antibiotic Resistance Enzymes by Protein Kinase Inhibitors

Denis M. Daigle; Geoffrey A. McKay; Gerard D. Wright


Chemistry & Biology | 1999

Prodigious substrate specificity of AAC(6')-APH(2"), an aminoglycoside antibiotic resistance determinant in enterococci and staphylococci.

Denis M. Daigle; Donald W. Hughes; Gerard D. Wright


Chemistry & Biology | 1999

Aminoglycoside antibiotic phosphotransferases are also serine protein kinases

Denis M. Daigle; Geoffrey A. McKay; Paul R. Thompson; Gerard D. Wright


Chemistry & Biology | 2004

Multicopy Suppressors for Novel Antibacterial Compounds Reveal Targets and Drug Efflux Susceptibility

Xiaoming Li; Michela Zolli-Juran; Jonathan D. Cechetto; Denis M. Daigle; Gerard D. Wright; Eric D. Brown


Biochemistry | 2002

YjeQ, an essential, conserved, uncharacterized protein from Escherichia coli, is an unusual GTPase with circularly permuted G-motifs and marked burst kinetics.

Denis M. Daigle; Laura Rossi; Albert M. Berghuis; L. Aravind; Eugene V. Koonin; Eric D. Brown

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