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Dive into the research topics where Helena Nordström is active.

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Featured researches published by Helena Nordström.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Identification of MMP-12 Inhibitors by Using Biosensor-Based Screening of a Fragment Library

Helena Nordström; Thomas Gossas; Markku Hämäläinen; Per Källblad; Susanne Nyström; Hans Wallberg; U. Helena Danielson

Small inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinase 12 (MMP-12) have been identified with a biosensor-based screening strategy and a specifically designed fragment library. The interaction between fragments and three variants of the target and a reference protein with an active-site zinc ion was measured continuously by surface plasmon resonance. The developed experimental design overcame the inherent instability of MMP-12 and allowed the identification of fragments that interacted specifically with the active-site of MMP-12 but not with the reference protein. The interaction with MMP-12 for selected compounds were analyzed for concentration dependence and saturability. Compounds interacting distinctly with the target were further evaluated by an activity-based assay, verifying MMP-12 inhibition. Two effective inhibitors were identified, and the compound with highest affinity was confirmed to be a competitive inhibitor with an IC50 of 290 nM and a ligand efficiency of 0.7 kcal/mol heavy atom. This procedure integrates selectivity and binding site identification into the screening procedure and does not require structure determination.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2011

Experimental validation of a fragment library for lead discovery using SPR biosensor technology.

Malin Elinder; Matthis Geitmann; Thomas Gossas; Per Källblad; Johan Winquist; Helena Nordström; Markkuu D. Hämäläinen; U. Helena Danielson

A new fragment library for lead discovery has been designed and experimentally validated for use in surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensor-based screening. The 930 compounds in the library were selected from 4.6 million commercially available compounds using a series of physicochemical and medicinal chemistry filters. They were screened against 3 prototypical drug targets: HIV-1 protease, thrombin and carbonic anhydrase, and a nontarget: human serum albumin. Compound solubility was not a problem under the conditions used for screening. The high sensitivity of the sensor surfaces allowed the detection of interactions for 35% to 97% of the fragments, depending on the target protein. None of the fragments was promiscuous (i.e., interacted with a stoichiometry ≥5:1 with all 4 proteins), and only 2 compounds dissociated slowly from all 4 proteins. The use of several targets proved valuable since several compounds would have been disqualified from the library on the grounds of promiscuity if fewer target proteins had been used. The experimental procedure allowed an efficient evaluation and exploration of the new fragment library and confirmed that the new library is suitable for SPR biosensor-based screening.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2010

Biotinylated lipid bilayer disks as model membranes for biosensor analyses.

Anna Lundquist; Søren B. Hansen; Helena Nordström; U. Helena Danielson; Katarina Edwards

The aim of this study was to investigate the potential of polyethylene glycol (PEG)-stabilized lipid bilayer disks as model membranes for surface plasmon resonance (SPR)-based biosensor analyses. Nanosized bilayer disks that included 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N-[biotinyl(polyethylene glycol)(2000)] (DSPE-PEG(2000)-biotin) were prepared and structurally characterized by cryo-transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) imaging. The biotinylated disks were immobilized via streptavidin to three different types of sensor chips (CM3, CM4, and CM5) varying in their degree of carboxymethylation and thickness of the dextran matrix. The bilayer disks were found to interact with and bind stably to the streptavidin-coated sensor surfaces. As a first step toward the use of these bilayer disks as model membranes in SPR-based studies of membrane proteins, initial investigations were carried out with cyclooxygenases 1 and 2 (COX 1 and COX 2). Bilayer disks were preincubated with the respective protein and thereafter allowed to interact with the sensor surface. The signal resulting from the interaction was, in both cases, significantly enhanced as compared with the signal obtained when disks alone were injected over the surface. The results of the study suggest that bilayer disks constitute a new and promising type of model membranes for SPR-based biosensor studies.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2009

Screening for NNRTIs with Slow Dissociation and High Affinity for a Panel of HIV-1 RT Variants

Malin Elinder; Helena Nordström; Matthis Geitmann; Markku Hämäläinen; Lotta Vrang; Bo Öberg; U. Helena Danielson

A lead optimization library consisting of 800 HIV-1 nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) was screened in parallel against 4 clinically relevant variants of HIV-1 RT (Wt, L100I, Y181C, and K103N) using a surface plasmon resonance—based biosensor. The aim was to identify inhibitors suitable in specific topical microbicides efficient for preventing the transmission of a range of clinically significant strains of HIV-1. The authors hypothesized that such compounds should have high affinity and slow dissociation rates for multiple variants of the target. To efficiently analyze the large amount of real-time data (sensorgrams) that were generated in the screening, they initially used signals from 3 selected time points to identify compounds with high affinity and slow dissociation for the complete panel of enzyme variants. Hits were confirmed by visually inspecting the complete sensorgrams. Two structurally unrelated compounds fulfilled the hit criteria, but only 1 compound was found to (a) compete with a known NNRTI for binding to the NNRTI site, (b) inhibit HIV-1 RT activity, and (c) inhibit HIV-1 replication in cell culture, for all 4 enzyme variants. This novel screening methodology offers high-resolution real-time kinetic data for multiple targets in parallel. It is expected to have broad applicability for the discovery of compounds with defined kinetic profiles, crucial for optimal therapeutic effects. (Journal of Biomolecular Screening 2009:395-403)


MedChemComm | 2013

The advantage of biosensor analysis over enzyme inhibition studies for slow dissociating inhibitors – characterization of hydroxamate-based matrix metalloproteinase-12 inhibitors

Thomas Gossas; Helena Nordström; Ming-Hua Xu; Zhi-Hua Sun; Guo-Qiang Lin; Hans Wallberg; U. Helena Danielson

The kinetic characteristics of hydroxamate-based inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-12 were explored using an SPR biosensor-based assay and enzyme inhibition analysis. These high-affinity inhibitors were shown to dissociate very slowly from the enzyme–inhibitor complex while a carboxylate analogue had a much faster dissociation rate, verifying the importance of the hydroxamate group for the slow dissociation. Progress curve enzyme inhibition analysis confirmed that the hydroxamate compounds but not the carboxylate compound acted as time-dependent inhibitors. The slow dissociation excluded steady-state estimation of IC50-values and Ki values but also made Ki values from progress curve analysis unreliable. Although a full characterization of the inhibitors using biosensor analysis was limited by slow dissociation, it provided kinetic and mechanistic information of relevance for MMP drug discovery and avoided some pitfalls of conventional enzyme inhibition assays.


Archive | 2013

From Temperature Dependence of Drug-Target Interactions to Thermodynamics and HIV Drug Resistance

Helena Nordström; Maria T. Lindgren; Annica Önell; Cynthia F. Shuman; Helena Danielson


Archive | 2013

Characterization of fragment hits interacting with MMP-12 reveals a dimerised adduct of a fragment hit in the active site

Helena Nordström; Dean Derbyshire; Thomas Gossas; Helena Danielson


Archive | 2013

Identification of Fragments for Design of HIV-1 Protease Inhibitors with Allosteric Mechanisms and New Resistance Profiles

Helena Nordström; Johan Winquist; Matthis Geitmann; Sara Solbak; Evert Homan; Peter Dinér; Markku Hämäläinen; Helena Danielson


Archive | 2012

New Scaffolds for Design of Inhibitors of Drug Resistant HIV-1 Protease Identified by Fragment Library Screening

Johan Winquist; Helena Nordström; Matthis Geitmann; Thomas Gossas; Evert Homan; Markku Hämäläinen; Helena Danielson


Archive | 2008

Initial evaluation of biotinylated bilayer disks as model membranes for biosensor analyses

Anna Lundquist; Søren B. Hansen; Helena Nordström; Helena Danielson; Katarina Edwards

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