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Dive into the research topics where George Vielhauer is active.

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Featured researches published by George Vielhauer.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Engineering an Antibiotic to Fight Cancer: Optimization of the Novobiocin Scaffold to Produce Anti-proliferative Agents

Huiping Zhao; Alison C. Donnelly; Bhaskar Reddy Kusuma; Gary E. L. Brandt; Douglas Brown; Roger A. Rajewski; George Vielhauer; Jeffrey M. Holzbeierlein; Mark S. Cohen; Brian S. J. Blagg

Development of the DNA gyrase inhibitor, novobiocin, into a selective Hsp90 inhibitor was accomplished through structural modifications to the amide side chain, coumarin ring, and sugar moiety. These species exhibit ∼700-fold improved anti-proliferative activity versus the natural product as evaluated by cellular efficacies against breast, colon, prostate, lung, and other cancer cell lines. Utilization of structure-activity relationships established for three novobiocin synthons produced optimized scaffolds, which manifest midnanomolar activity against a panel of cancer cell lines and serve as lead compounds that manifest their activities through Hsp90 inhibition.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2008

The design, synthesis, and evaluation of coumarin ring derivatives of the novobiocin scaffold that exhibit antiproliferative activity

Alison C. Donnelly; Jared R. Mays; Joseph A. Burlison; John T. Nelson; George Vielhauer; Jeffrey M. Holzbeierlein; Brian S. J. Blagg

Novobiocin, a known DNA gyrase inhibitor, binds to a nucleotide-binding site located on the Hsp90 C-terminus and induces degradation of Hsp90-dependent client proteins at approximately 700 microM in breast cancer cells (SKBr3). Although many analogues of novobiocin have been synthesized, it was only recently demonstrated that monomeric species exhibit antiproliferative activity against various cancer cell lines. To further refine the essential elements of the coumarin core, a series of modified coumarin derivatives was synthesized and evaluated to elucidate structure-activity relationships for novobiocin as an anticancer agent. Results obtained from these studies have produced novobiocin analogues that manifest low micromolar activity against several cancer cell lines.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2008

Development of Novobiocin Analogues That Manifest Anti-proliferative Activity against Several Cancer Cell Lines

Joseph A. Burlison; Christopher Avila; George Vielhauer; Donna J. Lubbers; Jeffrey M. Holzbeierlein; Brian S. J. Blagg

Recent studies have shown that the DNA gyrase inhibitor, novobiocin, binds to a previously unrecognized ATP-binding site located at the C-terminus of Hsp90 and induces degradation of Hsp90-dependent client proteins at approximately 700 microM. As a result of these studies, several analogues of the coumarin family of antibiotics have been reported and shown to exhibit increased Hsp90 inhibitory activity; however, the monomeric species lacked the ability to manifest anti-proliferative activity against cancer cell lines at concentrations tested. In an effort to develop more efficacious compounds that produce growth inhibitory activity against cancer cell lines, structure-activity relationships were investigated surrounding the prenylated benzamide side chain of the natural product. Results obtained from these studies have produced the first novobiocin analogues that manifest anti-proliferative activity against several cancer cell lines.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2009

KU135, a novel novobiocin-derived C-terminal inhibitor of the 90-kDa heat shock protein, exerts potent antiproliferative effects in human leukemic cells.

Shary N. Shelton; Mary E. Shawgo; Shawna B. Matthews; Yuanming Lu; Alison C. Donnelly; Kristen Szabla; Mehmet Tanol; George Vielhauer; Roger A. Rajewski; Robert L. Matts; Brian S. J. Blagg; John D. Robertson

The 90-kDa heat shock protein (Hsp90) assists in the proper folding of numerous mutated or overexpressed signal transduction proteins that are involved in cancer. Consequently, there is considerable interest in developing chemotherapeutic drugs that specifically disrupt the function of Hsp90. Here, we investigated the extent to which a novel novobiocin-derived C-terminal Hsp90 inhibitor, designated KU135, induced antiproliferative effects in Jurkat T-lymphocytes. The results indicated that KU135 bound directly to Hsp90, caused the degradation of known Hsp90 client proteins, and induced more potent antiproliferative effects than the established N-terminal Hsp90 inhibitor 17-allylamino-demethoxygeldanamycin (17-AAG). Closer examination of the cellular response to KU135 and 17-AAG revealed that only 17-AAG induced a strong up-regulation of Hsp70 and Hsp90. In addition, KU135 caused wild-type cells to undergo G2/M arrest, whereas cells treated with 17-AAG accumulated in G1. Furthermore, KU135 but not 17-AAG was found to be a potent inducer of mitochondria-mediated apoptosis as evidenced, in part, by the fact that cell death was inhibited to a similar extent by Bcl-2/Bcl-xL overexpression or the depletion of apoptotic protease-activating factor-1 (Apaf-1). Together, these data suggest that KU135 inhibits cell proliferation by regulating signaling pathways that are mechanistically different from those targeted by 17-AAG and as such represents a novel opportunity for Hsp90 inhibition.


BMC Cancer | 2011

Development and characterization of a novel C-terminal inhibitor of Hsp90 in androgen dependent and independent prostate cancer cells

Jeffery D. Eskew; Takrima Sadikot; Pedro J. Morales; Alicia Duren; Irene Dunwiddie; Megan Swink; Xiaoying Zhang; Stacey L. Hembruff; Alison C. Donnelly; Roger A. Rajewski; Brian S. J. Blagg; Jacob R. Manjarrez; Robert L. Matts; Jeffrey M. Holzbeierlein; George Vielhauer

BackgroundThe molecular chaperone, heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) has been shown to be overexpressed in a number of cancers, including prostate cancer, making it an important target for drug discovery. Unfortunately, results with N-terminal inhibitors from initial clinical trials have been disappointing, as toxicity and resistance resulting from induction of the heat shock response (HSR) has led to both scheduling and administration concerns. Therefore, Hsp90 inhibitors that do not induce the heat shock response represent a promising new direction for the treatment of prostate cancer. Herein, the development of a C-terminal Hsp90 inhibitor, KU174, is described, which demonstrates anti-cancer activity in prostate cancer cells in the absence of a HSR and describe a novel approach to characterize Hsp90 inhibition in cancer cells.MethodsPC3-MM2 and LNCaP-LN3 cells were used in both direct and indirect in vitro Hsp90 inhibition assays (DARTS, Surface Plasmon Resonance, co-immunoprecipitation, luciferase, Western blot, anti-proliferative, cytotoxicity and size exclusion chromatography) to characterize the effects of KU174 in prostate cancer cells. Pilot in vivo efficacy studies were also conducted with KU174 in PC3-MM2 xenograft studies.ResultsKU174 exhibits robust anti-proliferative and cytotoxic activity along with client protein degradation and disruption of Hsp90 native complexes without induction of a HSR. Furthermore, KU174 demonstrates direct binding to the Hsp90 protein and Hsp90 complexes in cancer cells. In addition, in pilot in-vivo proof-of-concept studies KU174 demonstrates efficacy at 75 mg/kg in a PC3-MM2 rat tumor model.ConclusionsOverall, these findings suggest C-terminal Hsp90 inhibitors have potential as therapeutic agents for the treatment of prostate cancer.


Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2010

Activity of Anticancer Agents in a Three-Dimensional Cell Culture Model

Victor S. Nirmalanandhan; Alicia Duren; Peter Hendricks; George Vielhauer; Gurusingham Sitta Sittampalam

Cell-monolayer-based assays for chemotherapeutic drug discovery have proven to be highly artificial compared with physiological systems. The objective of this study was to culture cancer cells in a simple 3-dimensional (3D) collagen gel model to study the antiproliferative activity of known lung cancer drugs. The validity of our 3D model was tested by measuring the activity of 10 lung cancer drugs (Paclitaxel, Alimta, Zactima, Doxorubicin, Vinorelbine, Gemcitabine, 17AAg, Cisplatin, and 2 experimental drugs from the University of Kansas [KU174 and KU363]) in 2 lung cancer cell lines (A549 and H358) and comparing the activity in a traditional 2-dimensional (2D) in vitro cellular assay. Both potency and efficacy of these drugs were calculated to evaluate the activity of the drugs. Our results demonstrate that the activity of these drugs showed significant differences when tested in 3D cultures, which varied with individual drugs and the cell line used for testing. For example, the cytotoxicity of Paclitaxel, KU174, Alimta, Zacitma, Doxorubicin, Vinorelbine, KU363, and 17AAg was significantly changed when tested in the 3D model, whereas the potency of Cisplatin and Gemcitabine in H358 cell line remained unaffected. A similar pattern, with some differences, was observed in A549 cells and is discussed in detail in this article. The observed differences in potency and efficacy of the cancer drugs in 3D models suggest that the biological implications of screening configurations should be taken into account to select superior cancer drug candidates in preclinical studies.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Targeting the Heat Shock Protein 90 Dimer with Dimeric Inhibitors

Bhaskar Reddy Kusuma; Laura B. Peterson; Huiping Zhao; George Vielhauer; Jeffrey M. Holzbeierlein; Brian S. J. Blagg

The design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of conformationally constrained coumermycin A1 analogues are reported. Compounds were evaluated against both breast cancer (SKBr3 and MCF7) and prostate cancer (PC3 mm2, A549, and HT29) cell lines. Non-noviosylated coumermycin A1 analogues that manifest potent antiproliferative activity resulting from Hsp90 inhibition are provided, wherein replacement of the stereochemically complex noviose sugar with readily available piperidine rings resulted in ∼100 fold increase in antiproliferative activities as compared to coumermycin A1, producing small molecule Hsp90 inhibitors that exhibit nanomolar activities.


The Prostate | 2010

Characterization of a novel novobiocin analogue as a putative C‐terminal inhibitor of heat shock protein 90 in prostate cancer cells

Shawna B. Matthews; George Vielhauer; Craig A. Manthe; Vamsee Chaguturu; Kristen Szabla; Robert L. Matts; Alison C. Donnelly; Brian S. J. Blagg; Jeffrey M. Holzbeierlein

Hsp90 is important in the folding, maturation and stabilization of pro‐tumorigenic client proteins and represents a viable drug target for the design of chemotherapies. Previously, we reported the development of novobiocin analogues designed to inhibit the C‐terminal portion of Hsp90, which demonstrated the ability to decrease client protein expression. We now report the characterization of the novel novobiocin analogue, F‐4, which demonstrates improved cytotoxicity in prostate cancer cell lines compared to the N‐terminal inhibitor, 17‐AAG.


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2012

The hERG channel is dependent upon the Hsp90α isoform for maturation and trafficking

Laura B. Peterson; Jeffrey Eskew; George Vielhauer; Brian S. J. Blagg

Heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) has emerged as a promising therapeutic target for the treatment of cancer. Several Hsp90 inhibitors have entered clinical trials. However, some toxicological detriments have arisen, such as cardiotoxicity resulting from hERG inhibition following the administration of Hsp90 inhibitors. We sought to investigate this toxicity as hERG has been previously reported as a client protein that depends upon Hsp90 for its maturation and functional trafficking. In this study we show that hERG depends upon a single Hsp90 isoform. hERG preferentially co-immunoprecipitated with Hsp90α, and genetic knockdown of Hsp90α, but not Hsp90β, resulted in a trafficking-defective hERG channel. This study demonstrates the importance of delineating the isoform dependence of Hsp90 client proteins and provides rationale for the design of isoform-selective Hsp90 inhibitors that avoid detrimental effects.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Synthesis and biological evaluation of coumarin replacements of novobiocin as Hsp90 inhibitors

Bhaskar Reddy Kusuma; Anuj Khandelwal; Wen Gu; Douglas Brown; Weiya Liu; George Vielhauer; Jeffrey M. Holzbeierlein; Brian S. J. Blagg

Since Hsp90 modulates all six hallmarks of cancer simultaneously, it has become an attractive target for the development of cancer chemotherapeutics. In an effort to develop more efficacious compounds for Hsp90 inhibition, novobiocin analogues were prepared by replacing the central coumarin core with naphthalene, quinolinone, and quinoline surrogates. These modifications allowed for modification of the 2-position, which was previously unexplored. Biological evaluation of these compounds suggests a hydrophobic pocket about the 2-position of novobiocin. Anti-proliferative activities of these analogues against multiple cancer cell lines identified 2-alkoxyquinoline derivatives to exhibit improved activity.

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Dale L. Boger

Scripps Research Institute

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