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Dive into the research topics where Eilyn R. Lacy is active.

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Featured researches published by Eilyn R. Lacy.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2004

p27 binds cyclin-CDK complexes through a sequential mechanism involving binding-induced protein folding

Eilyn R. Lacy; Igor Filippov; William S Lewis; Steve Otieno; Limin Xiao; Sonja Weiss; Ludger Hengst; Richard W. Kriwacki

p27 controls cell proliferation by binding and regulating nuclear cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). In addition, p27 interacts with other nuclear and cytoplasmic targets and has diverse biological functions. We seek to understand how the structural and dynamic properties of p27 mediate its several functions. We show that, despite showing disorder before binding its targets, p27 has nascent secondary structure that may have a function in molecular recognition. Binding to Cdk2–cyclin A is accompanied by p27 folding, and kinetic data suggest a sequential mechanism that is initiated by binding to cyclin A. p27 regulates CDK–cyclin complexes involved directly in cell cycle control and does not interact with other closely related CDKs. We show that p27-cyclin interactions are an important determinant of this specificity and propose that the homologous cell cycle regulators p21 and p57 function by a similar sequential, folding-on-binding mechanism.


mAbs | 2010

Characterization of golimumab, a human monoclonal antibody specific for human tumor necrosis factor α.

David Shealy; Ann Cai; Kim Staquet; Audrey Baker; Eilyn R. Lacy; Laura Johns; Omid Vafa; George R. Gunn; Susan Tam; Sarah Sague; Dana Wang; Mike Brigham-Burke; Paul Dalmonte; Eva Emmell; Bill Pikounis; Peter J. Bugelski; Honghui Zhou; Bernard Scallon; Jill Giles-Komar

We prepared and characterized golimumab (CNTO148), a human IgG1 tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) antagonist monoclonal antibody chosen for clinical development based on its molecular properties. Golimumab was compared with infliximab, adalimumab and etanercept for affinity and in vitro TNFα neutralization. The affinity of golimumab for soluble human TNFα, as determined by surface plasmon resonance, was similar to that of etanercept (18 pM versus 11 pM), greater than that of infliximab (44 pM) and significantly greater than that of adalimumab (127 pM, p=0.018). The concentration of golimumab necessary to neutralize TNFα-induced E-selectin expression on human endothelial cells by 50% was significantly less than those for infliximab (3.2 fold; p=0.017) and adalimumab (3.3-fold; p=0.008) and comparable to that for etanercept. The conformational stability of golimumab was greater than that of infliximab (primary melting temperature [Tm] 74.8 °C vs. 69.5 °C) as assessed by differential scanning calorimetry. In addition, golimumab showed minimal aggregation over the intended shelf life when formulated as a high concentration liquid product (100 mg/mL) for subcutaneous administration. In vivo, golimumab at doses of 1 and 10 mg/kg significantly delayed disease progression in a mouse model of human TNFα-induced arthritis when compared with untreated mice, while infliximab was effective only at 10 mg/kg. Golimumab also significantly reduced histological scores for arthritis severity and cartilage damage, as well as serum levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines associated with arthritis. Thus, we have demonstrated that golimumab is a highly stable human monoclonal antibody with high affinity and capacity to neutralize human TNFα in vitro and in vivo.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

Solution structure of choline binding protein A, the major adhesin of Streptococcus pneumoniae

Rensheng Luo; Beth Mann; William S Lewis; Arthur J. Rowe; Richard J. Heath; Michael L Stewart; Agnes E. Hamburger; Siva Sivakolundu; Eilyn R. Lacy; Pamela J. Bjorkman; Elaine Tuomanen; Richard W. Kriwacki

Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) remains a significant health threat worldwide, especially to the young and old. While some of the biomolecules involved in pneumococcal pathogenesis are known and understood in mechanistic terms, little is known about the molecular details of bacterium/host interactions. We report here the solution structure of the ‘repeated’ adhesion domains (domains R1 and R2) of the principal pneumococcal adhesin, choline binding protein A (CbpA). Further, we provide insights into the mechanism by which CbpA binds its human receptor, polymeric immunoglobulin receptor (pIgR). The R domains, comprised of 12 imperfect copies of the leucine zipper heptad motif, adopt a unique 3‐α‐helix, raft‐like structure. Each pair of α‐helices is antiparallel and conserved residues in the loop between Helices 1 and 2 exhibit a novel ‘tyrosine fork’ structure that is involved in binding pIgR. This and other structural features that we show are conserved in most pneumococcal strains appear to generally play an important role in bacterial adhesion to pIgR. Interestingly, pneumococcus is the only bacterium known to adhere to and invade human cells by binding to pIgR.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010

Structural basis for the dual recognition of IL-12 and IL-23 by ustekinumab.

Jinquan Luo; Sheng-Jiun Wu; Eilyn R. Lacy; Yevgeniya I. Orlovsky; Audrey Baker; Alexey Teplyakov; Galina Obmolova; George A. Heavner; Hans-Thomas Richter; Jacqueline Benson

Interleukin (IL)-12 and IL-23 are heterodimeric proinflammatory cytokines that share a common p40 subunit, paired with p35 and p19 subunits, respectively. They represent an attractive class of therapeutic targets for the treatment of psoriasis and other immune-mediated diseases. Ustekinumab is a fully human monoclonal antibody (mAb) that binds specifically to IL-12/IL-23p40 and neutralizes human IL-12 and IL-23 bioactivity. The crystal structure of ustekinumab Fab (antigen binding fragment of mAb), in complex with human IL-12, has been determined by X-ray crystallography at 3.0 Å resolution. Ustekinumab Fab binds the D1 domain of the p40 subunit in a 1:1 ratio in the crystal, consistent with a 2 cytokines:1 mAb stoichiometry, as measured by isothermal titration calorimetry. The structure indicates that ustekinumab binds to the same epitope on p40 in both IL-12 and IL-23 with identical interactions. Mutational analyses confirm that several residues identified in the IL-12/IL-23p40 epitope provide important molecular binding interactions with ustekinumab. The electrostatic complementarity between the mAb antigen binding site and the p40 D1 domain epitope appears to play a key role in antibody/antigen recognition specificity. Interestingly, this structure also reveals significant structural differences in the p35 subunit and p35/p40 interface, compared with the published crystal structure of human IL-12, suggesting unusual and potentially functionally relevant structural flexibility of p35, as well as p40/p35 recognition. Collectively, these data describe unique observations about IL-12p35 and ustekinumab interactions with p40 that account for its dual binding and neutralization of IL-12 and IL-23.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2007

Negative Regulation of ASK1 by p21Cip1 Involves a Small Domain That Includes Serine 98 That Is Phosphorylated by ASK1 In Vivo

Jun Zhan; John Easton; Shile Huang; Ashutosh Mishra; Limin Xiao; Eilyn R. Lacy; Richard W. Kriwacki; Peter J. Houghton

ABSTRACT The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21Cip1 regulates multiple cellular functions and protects cells from genotoxic and other cellular stresses. Activation of apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1) induced by inhibition of mTOR signaling leads to sustained phospho-c-Jun that is suppressed in cells with functional p53 or by forced expression of p21Cip1. Here we show that small deletions of p21Cip1 around S98 abrogate its association with ASK1 but do not affect binding to Cdk1, hence distinguishing between the cell cycle-regulating functions of p21Cip1 and its ability to suppress activation of the ASK1/Jun N-terminal protein kinase (JNK) pathway. p21Cip1 is phosphorylated in vitro by both ASK1 and JNK1 at S98. In vivo phosphorylation of p21Cip1, predominantly carried out by ASK1, is associated with binding to ASK1 and inactivation of ASK1 kinase function. Binding of p21Cip1 to ASK1 requires ASK1 kinase function and may involve phosphorylation of S98.


Protein Engineering Design & Selection | 2010

Structure-based engineering of a monoclonal antibody for improved solubility

Sheng-Jiun Wu; Jinquan Luo; Karyn O'neil; James Kang; Eilyn R. Lacy; Gabriela Canziani; Audrey Baker; Maggie Huang; Qing Mike Tang; T.Shantha Raju; Steven Jacobs; Alexey Teplyakov; Gary L. Gilliland; Yiqing Feng


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2005

Molecular basis for the specificity of p27 toward cyclin-dependent kinases that regulate cell division.

Eilyn R. Lacy; Yuefeng Wang; Jeremy Post; Amanda Nourse; William Webb; Marina Mapelli; Andrea Musacchio; Gary Siuzdak; Richard W. Kriwacki


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2006

Thermodynamic characterization of interactions between p27Kip1 and activated and non-activated Cdk2: Intrinsically unstructured proteins as thermodynamic tethers

Prentice Bowman; Charles A. Galea; Eilyn R. Lacy; Richard W. Kriwacki


Archive | 2009

Method to Assess Stability of Proteins

Michael Brigham-Burke; Eilyn R. Lacy


Cancer Research | 2018

Abstract 3813: Development of JNJ-64164711, a low fucose anti-GITR antibody for enhanced depletion of tumor regulatory T cells (Tregs)

Cam V. Holland; John Kehoe; Judith Hailey; Rupesh Nanjunda; Eilyn R. Lacy; Robin Ernst; Di Zhang; Samuel S. Wu; Alexey Teplyakov; Weimin Li; Michelle Kinder; Edward W. Thompson; Patrick Wilkinson; Jackson Wong; Gerald C. Chu; Linda Okonkwo; John Alvarez; Anhco Nguyen; Iqbal S. Grewal; Moitreyee Chatterjee-Kishore; Mark E. Salvati; Marco M. Gottardis

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Richard W. Kriwacki

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Limin Xiao

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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John Easton

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Jun Zhan

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Peter J. Houghton

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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William S Lewis

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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