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Dive into the research topics where Hai-Bing Zhou is active.

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Featured researches published by Hai-Bing Zhou.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2008

NFkappaB selectivity of estrogen receptor ligands revealed by comparative crystallographic analyses

Kendall W. Nettles; John B. Bruning; German Gil; Jason Nowak; Sanjay Sharma; Johnnie B. Hahm; Kristen S. Kulp; Richard B. Hochberg; Hai-Bing Zhou; John A. Katzenellenbogen; Benita S. Katzenellenbogen; Younchang Kim; Andrzej Joachmiak; Geoffrey L. Greene

Our understanding of how steroid hormones regulate physiological functions has been significantly advanced by structural biology approaches. However, progress has been hampered by misfolding of the ligand binding domains in heterologous expression systems and by conformational flexibility that interferes with crystallization. Here, we show that protein folding problems that are common to steroid hormone receptors are circumvented by mutations that stabilize well-characterized conformations of the receptor. We use this approach to present the structure of an apo steroid receptor that reveals a ligand-accessible channel allowing soaking of preformed crystals. Furthermore, crystallization of different pharmacological classes of compounds allowed us to define the structural basis of NFkappaB-selective signaling through the estrogen receptor, thus revealing a unique conformation of the receptor that allows selective suppression of inflammatory gene expression. The ability to crystallize many receptor-ligand complexes with distinct pharmacophores allows one to define structural features of signaling specificity that would not be apparent in a single structure.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2010

Development of [F-18]Fluorine-Substituted Tanaproget as a Progesterone Receptor Imaging Agent for Positron Emission Tomography

Jae Hak Lee; Hai-Bing Zhou; Carmen S. Dence; Kathryn E. Carlson; Michael J. Welch; John A. Katzenellenbogen

The level of progesterone receptors (PRs) in breast tumors can be used to guide the selection of endocrine therapies for breast cancer patients. To this end, we have prepared a fluorine-18 labeled analogue of Tanaproget, a nonsteroidal progestin with very high PR binding affinity and low affinity for androgen and glucocorticoid receptors, and have studied its tissue distribution in estrogen-primed rats to evaluate its potential for imaging PR levels by positron emission tomography. 4-[(18)F]Fluoropropyl-Tanaproget ([(18)F]9, FPTP) was prepared in three steps, within 140 min at an overall decay-corrected yield of 5% and effective specific activity of >550 Ci/mmol. In biodistribution studies, [(18)F]9 uptake was high in target tissues at both 1 and 3 h (uterus, 4.55 and 5.26%ID/g; ovary, 2.32 and 2.20%ID/g, respectively) and was cleanly blocked by coinjection of excess unlabeled compound. Uterus to blood and muscle activity ratios were 9.2 and 5.2 at 1 h and 32 and 26 at 3 h, respectively. The biodistribution of [(18)F]9 compares favorably to that of previously prepared F-18 labeled steroidal progestins, FENP and FFNP. Its high target tissue uptake efficiency and selectivity, and prolonged retention, suggest that it has excellent promise as a PET imaging agent for PR-positive breast tumors.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Novel Bioactive Hybrid Compound Dual Targeting Estrogen Receptor and Histone Deacetylase for the Treatment of Breast Cancer

Chu Tang; Changhao Li; Silong Zhang; Zhiye Hu; Jun Wu; Chune Dong; Jian Huang; Hai-Bing Zhou

A strategy to develop chemotherapeutic agents by combining several active groups into a single molecule as a conjugate that can modulate multiple cellular pathways may produce compounds having higher efficacy compared to that of single-target drugs. In this article, we describe the synthesis and evaluation of an array of dual-acting ER and histone deacetylase inhibitors. These novel hybrid compounds combine an indirect antagonism structure motif of ER (OBHS, oxabicycloheptene sulfonate) with the HDAC inhibitor suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA). These OBHS-HDACi conjugates exhibited good ER binding affinity and excellent ERα antagonistic activity, and they also exhibited potent inhibitory activities against HDACs. Compared with the approved drug tamoxifen, these conjugates exhibited higher antitumor potency in ERα-positive breast cancer cells (MCF-7). Moreover, these conjugates not only showed selective anticancer activity that was more potent against MCF-7 cells than DU 145 (prostate cancer), but they had no toxicity toward normal cells.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Thiophene-Core Estrogen Receptor Ligands Having Superagonist Activity

Jian Min; Pengcheng Wang; Sathish Srinivasan; Jerome C. Nwachukwu; Pu Guo; Minjian Huang; Kathryn E. Carlson; John A. Katzenellenbogen; Kendall W. Nettles; Hai-Bing Zhou

To probe the importance of the heterocyclic core of estrogen receptor (ER) ligands, we prepared a series of thiophene-core ligands by Suzuki cross-coupling of aryl boronic acids with bromo-thiophenes and we assessed their receptor binding and cell biological activities. The disposition of the phenol substituents on the thiophene core, at alternate or adjacent sites, and the nature of substituents on these phenols, all contribute to binding affinity and subtype selectivity. Most of the bis(hydroxyphenyl)-thiophenes were ERβ selective, whereas the tris(hydroxyphenyl)-thiophenes were ERα selective; analogous furan-core compounds generally have lower affinity and less selectivity. Some diarylthiophenes show distinct superagonist activity in reporter gene assays, giving maximal activities 2-3 times that of estradiol, and modeling suggests that these ligands have a different interaction with a hydrogen-bonding residue in helix-11. Ligand-core modification may be a new strategy for developing ER ligands whose selectivity is based on having transcriptional activity greater than that of estradiol.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Analogs of Methyl-Piperidinopyrazole (MPP): Antiestrogens with Estrogen Receptor α Selective Activity

Hai-Bing Zhou; Kathryn E. Carlson; Fabio Stossi; Benita S. Katzenellenbogen; John A. Katzenellenbogen

Methyl-piperidino-pyrazole (MPP), an estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha)-selective antagonist we developed, has a basic side chain (BSC) attached to an ERalpha-selective agonist ligand, methyl-pyrazole-triol (MPT) through an ether linkage. To remove the possibility that metabolic cleavage of the BSC in MPP would regenerate MPT, we have replaced the N-piperidinylethoxy moiety with an N-piperidinylpropyl group, giving MPrP. This new analog retains the high ERalpha-selective binding affinity and antagonist potency of MPP.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Imaging progesterone receptor in breast tumors: synthesis and receptor binding affinity of fluoroalkyl-substituted analogues of tanaproget.

Hai-Bing Zhou; Jae Hak Lee; Christopher G. Mayne; Kathryn E. Carlson; John A. Katzenellenbogen

The progesterone receptor (PR) is estrogen regulated, and PR levels in breast tumors can be used to predict the success of endocrine therapies targeting the estrogen receptor (ER). Tanaproget is a nonsteroidal progestin agonist with very high PR binding affinity and excellent in vivo potency. When appropriately radiolabeled, it might be used to image PR-positive breast tumors noninvasively by positron emission tomography (PET). We describe the synthesis and PR binding affinities of a series of fluoroalkyl-substituted 6-aryl-1,4-dihydrobenzo[d][1,3]oxazine-2-thiones, analogues of Tanaproget. Some of these compounds have subnanomolar binding affinities, higher than that of either Tanaproget itself or the high affinity PR ligand R5020. Structure-binding affinity relationships can be rationalized by molecular modeling of ligand complexes with PR, and the enantioselectivity of binding has been predicted. These compounds are being further evaluated as potential diagnostic PET imaging agents for breast cancer, and enantiomerically pure materials of defined stereochemistry are being prepared.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2013

Enantioselective inhibition of reverse transcriptase (RT) of HIV-1 by non-racemic indole-based trifluoropropanoates developed by asymmetric catalysis using recyclable organocatalysts.

Xin Han; Wenjie Ouyang; Bin Liu; Wei Wang; Po Tien; Shuwen Wu; Hai-Bing Zhou

Herein, we report the development of efficient inhibitors of reverse transcriptase (RT) of HIV-1 based on indole-alkyl trifluoropyruvate derivatives by a TZM-bl cell assay. The inhibitory activities of the two enantiomers and the corresponding racemic mixture have been compared. TZM-bl cells exhibited strong enantioselective discrimination for the (R)-configuration, among these indole derivatives, the most active compound R-12, with a 5-NO2 substituent, gave the best result when tested in the TZM-bl cells on HIV virus type HIV-1IIIB, with an EC50 value of 0.019 μM, CC50 value of 210.697 μM and SI (selectivity index, CC50/EC50) value of 11,089, respectively. The cell test showed that, in most cases, the R-enantiomer was superior to the Rac-mixture, which was better than the corresponding S-enantiomer. The results indicated that the R-enantiomer is the most favorable configuration as an efficient HIV-1 inhibitor. Molecular modeling studies suggested a structural basis for the enantioselectivity of RT towards this class of molecules.


ChemMedChem | 2012

Development of selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM)-like activity through an indirect mechanism of estrogen receptor antagonism: defining the binding mode of 7-oxabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-ene scaffold core ligands.

Yangfan Zheng; Manghong Zhu; Sathish Srinivasan; Jerome C. Nwachukwu; Valerie Cavett; Jian Min; Kathryn E. Carlson; Pengcheng Wang; Chune Dong; John A. Katzenellenbogen; Kendall W. Nettles; Hai-Bing Zhou

Previously, we discovered estrogen receptor (ER) ligands with a novel three‐dimensional oxabicyclo[2.2.1]heptene core scaffold and good ER binding affinity act as partial agonists via small alkyl ester substitutions on the bicyclic core that indirectly modulate the critical switch helix in the ER ligand binding domain, helix 12, by interactions with helix 11. This contrasts with the mechanism of action of tamoxifen, which directly pushes helix 12 out of the conformation required for gene activation. We now report that a much larger substitution can be tolerated at this position of the bicyclic core scaffold, namely a phenyl sulfonate group, which defines a novel binding epitope for the estrogen receptor. We prepared an array of 14 oxabicycloheptene sulfonates, varying the phenyl sulfonate group. As with the parent compound, 5,6‐bis‐(4‐hydroxyphenyl)‐7‐oxabicyclo[2.2.1]hept‐5‐ene‐2‐sulfonic acid phenyl ester (OBHS), these compounds showed preferential affinity for ERα, and the disposition and size of the phenyl substituents were important determinants of the binding affinity and selectivity of these compounds, with those having ortho substituents giving the highest, and para substituents the lowest affinities for ERα. A few analogues exhibit ERα binding affinities that are comparable to or, in the case of the ortho‐chloro analogue, higher than that of OBHS itself. In cell‐based studies, we found several compounds with activity profiles comparable to tamoxifen, but acting entirely as indirect antagonists, allosterically interfering with recruitment of coactivator proteins to the receptor. Thus, the OBHS binding epitope represents a novel approach to the development of estrogen receptor antagonists via an indirect mechanism of antagonism.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Identification and Structure-Activity Relationships of a Novel Series of Estrogen Receptor Ligands Based on 7-Thiabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-2-ene-7-oxide

Pengcheng Wang; Jian Min; Jerome C. Nwachukwu; Valerie Cavett; Kathryn E. Carlson; Pu Guo; Manghong Zhu; Yangfan Zheng; Chune Dong; John A. Katzenellenbogen; Kendall W. Nettles; Hai-Bing Zhou

To develop estrogen receptor (ER) ligands having novel structures and activities, we have explored compounds in which the central hydrophobic core has a more three-dimensional topology than typically found in estrogen ligands and thus exploits the unfilled space in the ligand-binding pocket. Here, we build upon our previous investigations of 7-oxabicyclo[2.2.1]heptene core ligands, by replacing the oxygen bridge with a sulfoxide. These new 7-thiabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-2-ene-7-oxides were conveniently prepared by a Diels-Alder reaction of 3,4-diarylthiophenes with dienophiles in the presence of an oxidant and give cycloadducts with endo stereochemistry. Several new compounds demonstrated high binding affinities with excellent ERα selectivity, but unlike oxabicyclic compounds, which are transcriptional antagonists, most thiabicyclic compounds are potent, ERα-selective agonists. Modeling suggests that the gain in activity of the thiabicyclic compounds arises from their endo stereochemistry that stabilizes an active ER conformation. Further, the disposition of methyl substituents in the phenyl groups attached to the bicyclic core unit contributes to their binding affinity and subtype selectivity.


RSC Advances | 2012

An expedient approach to highly enantioenriched cyclic nitrones mediated by robust and recoverable C3-symmetric cinchonine-squaramide catalysts

Xin Han; Xiangfei Wu; Chang Min; Hai-Bing Zhou; Chune Dong

The C3-symmetric cinchonine-squaramide catalyzed asymmetric Michael addition of β-ketosulfones to nitroalkenes is presented. Subsequent transformation leads to chiral cyclic nitrones with excellent results (up to 85% yield and >99% ee). The catalyst can be recovered and reused for six cycles without losing activity and selectivity.

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