Ferit Tuzer
Drexel University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ferit Tuzer.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Hosahudya N. Gopi; M. Umashankara; Vanessa Pirrone; Judith M. LaLonde; Navid Madani; Ferit Tuzer; Sabine Baxter; Isaac Zentner; Simon Cocklin; Navneet Jawanda; Shendra Miller; Arne Schön; Jeffrey C. Klein; Ernesto Freire; Fred C. Krebs; Amos B. Smith; Joseph Sodroski; Irwin M. Chaiken
Structure-activity correlations were investigated for substituted peptide conjugates that function as dual receptor site antagonists of HIV-1 gp120. A series of peptide conjugates were constructed via click reaction of both aryl and alkyl acetylenes with an internally incorporated azidoproline 6 derived from the parent peptide 1 (12p1, RINNIPWSEAMM). Compared to 1, many of these conjugates were found to exhibit several orders of magnitude increase in both affinity for HIV-1 gp120 and inhibition potencies at both the CD4 and coreceptor binding sites of gp120. We sought to determine structural factors in the added triazole grouping responsible for the increased binding affinity and antiviral activity of the dual inhibitor conjugates. We measured peptide conjugate potencies in both kinetic and cell infection assays. High affinity was sterically specific, being exhibited by the cis- but not the trans-triazole. The results demonstrate that aromatic, hydrophobic, and steric features in the residue 6 side-chain are important for increased affinity and inhibition. Optimizing these features provides a basis for developing gp120 dual inhibitors into peptidomimetic and increasingly smaller molecular weight entry antagonist leads.
Journal of Molecular Recognition | 2009
Hosahudya N. Gopi; Simon Cocklin; Vanessa Pirrone; Karyn McFadden; Ferit Tuzer; Isaac Zentner; Sandya Ajith; Sabine Baxter; Navneet Jawanda; Fred C. Krebs; Irwin M. Chaiken
In this work, we identified a high affinity and potency metallocene‐containing triazole peptide conjugate that suppresses the interactions of HIV‐1 envelope gp120 at both its CD4 and co‐receptor binding sites. The ferrocene‐peptide conjugate, HNG‐156, was formed by an on‐resin copper‐catalysed [2 + 3] cycloaddition reaction. Surface plasmon resonance interaction analysis revealed that, compared to a previously reported phenyl‐containing triazole conjugate HNG‐105 (105), peptide 156 had a higher direct binding affinity for several subtypes of HIV‐1 gp120 due mainly to the decreased dissociation rate of the conjugate‐gp120 complex. The ferrocene triazole conjugate bound to gp120 of both clade A (92UG037‐08) and clade B (YU‐2 and SF162) virus subtypes with nanomolar KD in direct binding and inhibited the binding of gp120 to soluble CD4 and to antibodies that bind to HIV‐1YU‐2 gp120 at both the CD4 binding site and CD4‐induced binding sites. HNG‐156 showed a close‐to nanomolar IC50 for inhibiting cell infection by HIV‐1BaL whole virus. The dual receptor site antagonist activity and potency of HNG‐156 make it a promising viral envelope inhibitor lead for developing anti‐HIV‐1 treatments. Copyright
ChemMedChem | 2010
M. Umashankara; Karyn McFadden; Isaac Zentner; Arne Schön; Srivats Rajagopal; Ferit Tuzer; Syna Kuriakose; Mark Contarino; Judith M. LaLonde; Ernesto Freire; Irwin M. Chaiken
In an effort to identify broadly active inhibitors of HIV‐1 entry into host cells, we previously reported a family of dodecamer triazole–peptide conjugates with nanomolar affinity for the viral surface protein gp120. This peptide class exhibits potent antiviral activity and the capacity to simultaneously inhibit interaction of the viral envelope protein with both CD4 and co‐receptor. In this investigation, we minimized the structural complexity of the lead triazole inhibitor HNG‐156 (peptide 1) to explore the limits of the pharmacophore that enables dual antagonism and to improve opportunities for peptidomimetic design. Truncations of both carboxy‐ and amino‐terminal residues from the parent 12‐residue peptide 1 were found to have minimal effects on both affinity and antiviral activity. In contrast, the central triazole(Pro)‐Trp cluster at residues 6 and 7 with ferrocenyl‐triazole(Pro) (Ftp) was found to be critical for bioactivity. Amino‐terminal residues distal to the central triazole(Pro)‐Trp sequence tolerated decreasing degrees of side chain variation upon approaching the central cluster. A peptide fragment containing residues 3–7 (Asn‐Asn‐Ile‐Ftp‐Trp) exhibited substantial direct binding affinity, antiviral potency, dual receptor site antagonism, and induction of gp120 structuring, all properties that define the functional signature of the parent compound 1. This active core contains a stereochemically specific hydrophobic triazole(Pro)‐Trp cluster, with a short N‐terminal peptide extension providing groups for potential main chain and side chain hydrogen bonding. The results of this work argue that the pharmacophore for dual antagonism is structurally limited, thereby enhancing the potential to develop minimized peptidomimetic HIV‐1 entry inhibitors that simultaneously suppress binding of envelope protein to both of its host cell receptors. The results also argue that the target epitope on gp120 is relatively small, pointing to a localized allosteric inhibition site in the HIV‐1 envelope that could be targeted for small‐molecule inhibitor discovery.
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience | 2016
Elizabeth Crowe; Ferit Tuzer; Brian D. Gregory; Greg Donahue; Sager J. Gosai; Justin Cohen; Yuk Y. Leung; Emre Yetkin; Raffaella Nativio; Li-San Wang; Christian Sell; Nancy M. Bonini; Shelley L. Berger; F. Brad Johnson; Claudio Torres
Aging is a major risk factor for many neurodegenerative disorders. A key feature of aging biology that may underlie these diseases is cellular senescence. Senescent cells accumulate in tissues with age, undergo widespread changes in gene expression, and typically demonstrate altered, pro-inflammatory profiles. Astrocyte senescence has been implicated in neurodegenerative disease, and to better understand senescence-associated changes in astrocytes, we investigated changes in their transcriptome using RNA sequencing. Senescence was induced in human fetal astrocytes by transient oxidative stress. Brain-expressed genes, including those involved in neuronal development and differentiation, were downregulated in senescent astrocytes. Remarkably, several genes indicative of astrocytic responses to injury were also downregulated, including glial fibrillary acidic protein and genes involved in the processing and presentation of antigens by major histocompatibility complex class II proteins, while pro-inflammatory genes were upregulated. Overall, our findings suggest that senescence-related changes in the function of astrocytes may impact the pathogenesis of age-related brain disorders.
Proteins | 2013
Ferit Tuzer; Navid Madani; Kantharaju Kamanna; Isaac Zentner; Judith M. LaLonde; Andrew P. Holmes; Elizabeth Upton; Srivats Rajagopal; Karyn McFadden; Mark Contarino; Joseph Sodroski; Irwin M. Chaiken
Despite advances in HIV therapy, viral resistance and side‐effects with current drug regimens require targeting new components of the virus. Dual antagonist peptide triazoles (PT) are a novel class of HIV‐1 inhibitors that specifically target the gp120 component of the viral spike and inhibit its interaction with both of its cell surface protein ligands, namely the initial receptor CD4 and the co‐receptor (CCR5/CXCR4), thus preventing viral entry. Following an initial survey of 19 gp120 alanine mutants by ELISA, we screened 11 mutants for their importance in binding to, and inhibition by the PT KR21 using surface plasmon resonance. Key mutants were purified and tested for their effects on the peptides affinity and its ability to inhibit binding of CD4 and the co‐receptor surrogate mAb 17b. Effects of the mutations on KR21 viral neutralization were measured by single‐round cell infection assays. Two mutations, D474A and T257A, caused large‐scale loss of KR21 binding, as well as losses in both CD4/17b and viral inhibition by KR21. A set of other Ala mutants revealed more moderate losses in direct binding affinity and inhibition sensitivity to KR21. The cluster of sensitive residues defines a PT functional epitope. This site is in a conserved region of gp120 that overlaps the CD4 binding site and is distant from the co‐receptor/17b binding site, suggesting an allosteric mode of inhibition for the latter. The arrangement and sequence conservation of the residues in the functional epitope explain the breadth of antiviral activity, and improve the potential for rational inhibitor development. Proteins 2013.
Nature Neuroscience | 2018
Raffaella Nativio; Greg Donahue; Amit Berson; Yemin Lan; Alexandre Amlie-Wolf; Ferit Tuzer; Jon B. Toledo; Sager J. Gosai; Brian D. Gregory; Claudio Torres; John Q. Trojanowski; Li-San Wang; F. Brad Johnson; Nancy M. Bonini; Shelley L. Berger
Aging is the strongest risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease (AD), although the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. The chromatin state, in particular through the mark H4K16ac, has been implicated in aging and thus may play a pivotal role in age-associated neurodegeneration. Here we compare the genome-wide enrichment of H4K16ac in the lateral temporal lobe of AD individuals against both younger and elderly cognitively normal controls. We found that while normal aging leads to H4K16ac enrichment, AD entails dramatic losses of H4K16ac in the proximity of genes linked to aging and AD. Our analysis highlights the presence of three classes of AD-related changes with distinctive functional roles. Furthermore, we discovered an association between the genomic locations of significant H4K16ac changes with genetic variants identified in prior AD genome-wide association studies and with expression quantitative trait loci. Our results establish the basis for an epigenetic link between aging and AD.By comparing the genome-wide profile of H4K16ac in AD with younger and elder controls, the authors propose a mechanism for how age is a risk factor for AD: a histone modification, whose accumulation is associated with aging, is dysregulated in AD.
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience | 2017
Justin Cohen; Luca D’Agostino; Joel Wilson; Ferit Tuzer; Claudio Torres
With the advent of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) survival rates among patients infected by HIV have increased. However, even though survival has increased HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) still persist, suggesting that HAART-drugs may play a role in the neurocognitive impairment observed in HIV-infected patients. Given previous data demonstrating that astrocyte senescence plays a role in neurocognitive disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD), we examined the role of HAART on markers of senescence in primary cultures of human astrocytes (HAs). Our results indicate HAART treatment induces cell cycle arrest, senescence-associated beta-galactosidase, and the cell cycle inhibitor p21. Highly active antiretroviral therapy treatment is also associated with the induction of reactive oxygen species and upregulation of mitochondrial oxygen consumption. These changes in mitochondria correlate with increased glycolysis in HAART drug treated astrocytes. Taken together these results indicate that HAART drugs induce the senescence program in HAs, which is associated with oxidative and metabolic changes that could play a role in the development of HAND.
Biochemistry | 2014
Ali Emileh; Caitlin Duffy; Andrew P. Holmes; Arangassery Rosemary Bastian; Rachna Aneja; Ferit Tuzer; Srivats Rajagopal; Huiyuan Li; Cameron F. Abrams; Irwin M. Chaiken
The HIV-1 gp120 glycoprotein is the main viral surface protein responsible for initiation of the entry process and, as such, can be targeted for the development of entry inhibitors. We previously identified a class of broadly active peptide triazole (PT) dual antagonists that inhibit gp120 interactions at both its target receptor and coreceptor binding sites, induce shedding of gp120 from virus particles prior to host–cell encounter, and consequently can prevent viral entry and infection. However, our understanding of the conformational alterations in gp120 by which PT elicits its dual receptor antagonism and virus inactivation functions is limited. Here, we used a recently developed computational model of the PT–gp120 complex as a blueprint to design a covalently conjugated PT–gp120 recombinant protein. Initially, a single-cysteine gp120 mutant, E275CYU-2, was expressed and characterized. This variant retains excellent binding affinity for peptide triazoles, for sCD4 and other CD4 binding site (CD4bs) ligands, and for a CD4-induced (CD4i) ligand that binds the coreceptor recognition site. In parallel, we synthesized a PEGylated and biotinylated peptide triazole variant that retained gp120 binding activity. An N-terminally maleimido variant of this PEGylated PT, denoted AE21, was conjugated to E275C gp120 to produce the AE21–E275C covalent conjugate. Surface plasmon resonance interaction analysis revealed that the PT–gp120 conjugate exhibited suppressed binding of sCD4 and 17b to gp120, signatures of a PT-bound state of envelope protein. Similar to the noncovalent PT–gp120 complex, the covalent conjugate was able to bind the conformationally dependent mAb 2G12. The results argue that the PT–gp120 conjugate is structurally organized, with an intramolecular interaction between the PT and gp120 domains, and that this structured state embodies a conformationally entrapped gp120 with an altered bridging sheet but intact 2G12 epitope. The similarities of the PT–gp120 conjugate to the noncovalent PT–gp120 complex support the orientation of binding of PT to gp120 predicted in the molecular dynamics simulation model of the PT–gp120 noncovalent complex. The conformationally stabilized covalent conjugate can be used to expand the structural definition of the PT-induced “off” state of gp120, for example, by high-resolution structural analysis. Such structures could provide a guide for improving the subsequent structure-based design of inhibitors with the peptide triazole mode of action.
ChemMedChem | 2013
Kantharaju Kamanna; Rachna Aneja; Caitlin Duffy; Pamela Kubinski; Diogo Rodrigo Magalhaes Moreira; Lauren D. Bailey; Karyn McFadden; Arne Schön; Andrew P. Holmes; Ferit Tuzer; Mark Contarino; Ernesto Freire; Irwin M. Chaiken
We investigated the derivation of non‐natural peptide triazole dual receptor site antagonists of HIV‐1 Env gp120 to establish a pathway for developing peptidomimetic antiviral agents. Previously we found that the peptide triazole HNG‐156 [R‐I‐N‐N‐I‐X‐W‐S‐E‐A‐M‐M‐CONH2, in which X=ferrocenyltriazole‐Pro (FtP)] has nanomolar binding affinity to gp120, inhibits gp120 binding to CD4 and the co‐receptor surrogate mAb 17b, and has potent antiviral activity in cell infection assays. Furthermore, truncated variants of HNG‐156, typified by UM‐24 (Cit‐N‐N‐I‐X‐W‐S‐CONH2) and containing the critical central stereospecific LX‐LW cluster, retain the functional characteristics of the parent peptide triazole. In the current work, we examined the possibility of replacing natural with unnatural residue components in UM‐24 to the greatest extent possible. The analogue with the critical “hot spot” residue Trp 6 replaced with L‐3‐benzothienylalanine (Bta) (KR‐41), as well as a completely non‐natural analogue containing D‐amino acid substitutions outside the central cluster (KR‐42, DCit‐DN‐DN‐DI‐X‐Bta‐DS‐CONH2), retained the dual receptor site antagonism/antiviral activity signature. The results define differential functional roles of subdomains within the peptide triazole and provide a structural basis for the design of metabolically stable peptidomimetic inhibitors of HIV‐1 Env gp120.
Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2018
Natalie C. Chen; Andrea T. Partridge; Ferit Tuzer; Justin Cohen; Timothy Nacarelli; Sonia Navas-Martin; Christian Sell; Claudio Torres; Julio Martín-García
HIV-1 causes premature aging in chronically infected patients. Despite effective anti-retroviral therapy, around 50% of patients suffer HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND), which likely potentiate aging-associated neurocognitive decline. Microglia support productive HIV-1 infection in the brain. Elevated markers of cellular senescence, including p53 and p21, have been detected in brain tissues from patients with HAND, but the potential for microglia senescence during HIV-1 infection has not been investigated. We hypothesized that HIV-1 can induce senescence in microglia. Primary human fetal microglia were exposed to single-round infectious HIV-1 pseudotypes or controls, and examined for markers of senescence. Post-infection, microglia had significantly elevated: senescence-associated β-galactosidase activity, p21 levels, and production of cytokines such as IL-6 and IL-8, potentially indicative of a senescence-associated secretory phenotype. We also found increased detection of p53-binding protein foci in microglia nuclei post-infection. Additionally, we examined mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) and respiration, and found significantly increased mitochondrial ROS levels and decreased ATP-linked respiration during HIV-1 infection. Supernatant transfer from infected cultures to naïve microglia resulted in elevated p21 and caveolin-1 levels, and IL-8 production. Finally, nucleoside treatment reduced senescence markers induction in microglia. Overall, HIV-1 induces a senescence-like phenotype in human microglia, which could play a role in HAND.