Eric Lansdon
University of California, Davis
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Publication
Featured researches published by Eric Lansdon.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Manuel Tsiang; Gregg S. Jones; Anita Niedziela-Majka; Elaine Kan; Eric Lansdon; Wayne Huang; Magdeleine Hung; Dharmaraj Samuel; Nikolai Novikov; Yili Xu; Michael J. Mitchell; Hongyan Guo; Kerim Babaoglu; Xiaohong Liu; Romas Geleziunas; Roman Sakowicz
Background: Competitors of LEDGF binding to HIV-1 integrase could prevent targeted integration to chromatin. Results: LEDGF competitors like tBPQAs were also found to inhibit integrase enzyme activity by preventing proper integrase-viral DNA assembly. Conclusion: tBPQAs are allosteric inhibitors of integrase with a dual mode of action. Significance: Interference with two distinct steps of integration through the same binding site represents a new antiviral paradigm. tert-Butoxy-(4-phenyl-quinolin-3-yl)-acetic acids (tBPQA) are a new class of HIV-1 integrase (IN) inhibitors that are structurally distinct from IN strand transfer inhibitors but analogous to LEDGINs. LEDGINs are a class of potent antiviral compounds that interacts with the lens epithelium-derived growth factor (LEDGF) binding pocket on IN and were identified through competition binding against LEDGF. LEDGF tethers IN to the host chromatin and enables targeted integration of viral DNA. The prevailing understanding of the antiviral mechanism of LEDGINs is that they inhibit LEDGF binding to IN, which prevents targeted integration of HIV-1. We showed that in addition to the properties already known for LEDGINs, the binding of tBPQAs to the IN dimer interface inhibits IN enzymatic activity in a LEDGF-independent manner. Using the analysis of two long terminal repeat junctions in HIV-infected cells, we showed that the inhibition by tBPQAs occurs at or prior to the viral DNA 3′-processing step. Biochemical studies revealed that this inhibition operates by compound-induced conformational changes in the IN dimer that prevent proper assembly of IN onto viral DNA. For the first time, tBPQAs were demonstrated to be allosteric inhibitors of HIV-1 IN displaying a dual mode of action: inhibition of IN-viral DNA assembly and inhibition of IN-LEDGF interaction.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2011
Eric Lansdon; Qi Liu; Stephanie A. Leavitt; Mini Balakrishnan; Jason K. Perry; Candra Lancaster-Moyer; Nilima Kutty; Xiaohong Liu; Neil Squires; William J. Watkins; Thorsten A. Kirschberg
ABSTRACT HIV-1 RNase H breaks down the intermediate RNA-DNA hybrids during reverse transcription, requiring two divalent metal ions for activity. Pyrimidinol carboxylic acid and N-hydroxy quinazolinedione inhibitors were designed to coordinate the two metal ions in the active site of RNase H. High-resolution (1.4 Å to 2.1 Å) crystal structures were determined with the isolated RNase H domain and reverse transcriptase (RT), which permit accurate assessment of the metal and water environment at the active site. The geometry of the metal coordination suggests that the inhibitors mimic a substrate state prior to phosphodiester catalysis. Surface plasmon resonance studies confirm metal-dependent binding to RNase H and demonstrate that the inhibitors do not bind at the polymerase active site of RT. Additional evaluation of the RNase H site reveals an open protein surface with few additional interactions to optimize active-site inhibitors.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2011
Brian J. Scarth; Kirsten L. White; James M. Chen; Eric Lansdon; S. Swaminathan; Michael D. Miller; Matthias Götte
ABSTRACT GS-9148 is an investigational phosphonate nucleotide analogue inhibitor of reverse transcriptase (RT) (NtRTI) of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). This compound is an adenosine derivative with a 2′,3′-dihydrofuran ring structure that contains a 2′-fluoro group. The resistance profile of GS-9148 is unique in that the inhibitor can select for the very rare Q151L mutation in HIV-1 RT as a pathway to resistance. Q151L is not stably selected by any of the approved nucleoside or nucleotide analogues; however, it may be a transient intermediate that leads to the related Q151M mutation, which confers resistance to multiple compounds that belong to this class of RT inhibitors. Here, we employed pre-steady-state kinetics to study the impact of Q151L on substrate and inhibitor binding and the catalytic rate of incorporation. Most importantly, we found that the Q151L mutant is unable to incorporate GS-9148 under single-turnover conditions. Interference experiments showed that the presence of GS-9148–diphosphate, i.e., the active form of the inhibitor, does not reduce the efficiency of incorporation for the natural counterpart. We therefore conclude that Q151L severely compromises binding of GS-9148–diphosphate to RT. This effect is highly specific, since we also demonstrate that another NtRTI, tenofovir, is incorporated with selectivity similar to that seen with wild-type RT. Incorporation assays with other related compounds and models based on the RT/DNA/GS-9148–diphosphate crystal structure suggest that the 2′-fluoro group of GS-9148 may cause steric hindrance with the side chain of the Q151L mutant.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010
Eric Lansdon; Dharmaraj Samuel; Leanna Lagpacan; Katherine M. Brendza; Kirsten L. White; Magdeleine Hung; Xiaohong Liu; Constantine G. Boojamra; Richard L. Mackman; Tomas Cihlar; Adrian S. Ray; Mary E. McGrath; S. Swaminathan
Biochemistry | 2004
Eric Lansdon; Andrew J. Fisher; Irwin H. Segel
Biochemistry | 2002
Eric Lansdon; Irwin H. Segel; Andrew J. Fisher
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2007
Zhihao Yu; Eric Lansdon; Irwin H. Segel; Andrew J. Fisher
Archive | 2013
Kerim Babaoglu; Gediminas Brizgys; Hongyan Guo; Paul Hrvatin; Eric Lansdon; John O. Link; Hongtao Liu; Ryan Mcfadden; Michael L. Mitchell; Yingmei Qi; Paul A. Roethle; Randall W. Vivian; Lianhong Xu; Hong Yang
Archive | 2013
Kerim Babaoglu; Kyla Bjornson; Paul Hrvatin; Eric Lansdon; John O. Link; Hongtao Liu; Ryan Mcfadden; Michael L. Mitchell; Yingmei Qi; Paul A. Roethle; Lianhong Xu
Archive | 2015
Petr Jansa; Eric Lansdon; Yunfeng Eric Hu; Milan Dejmek; Richard L. Mackman; Petr Simon; Ondrej Baszczynski