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Dive into the research topics where Hugues Bernard is active.

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Featured researches published by Hugues Bernard.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2011

Selective irreversible inhibition of a protease by targeting a noncatalytic cysteine

Margit Hagel; Deqiang Niu; Thia St. Martin; Michael Sheets; Lixin Qiao; Hugues Bernard; Russell Karp; Zhendong Zhu; Matthew T. Labenski; Prasoon Chaturvedi; Mariana Nacht; William F. Westlin; Russell C. Petter; Juswinder Singh

Designing selective inhibitors of proteases has proven problematic, in part because pharmacophores that confer potency exploit the conserved catalytic apparatus. We developed a fundamentally different approach by designing irreversible inhibitors that target noncatalytic cysteines that are structurally unique to a target in a protein family. We have successfully applied this approach to the important therapeutic target HCV protease, which has broad implications for the design of other selective protease inhibitors.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2011

Quantitative Proteomic Analysis of Cellular Protein Modulation upon Inhibition of the NEDD8-Activating Enzyme by MLN4924

Hua Liao; Xiaozhen J. Liu; Jonathan L. Blank; David C. Bouck; Hugues Bernard; Khristofer Garcia

Cullin-RING ubiquitin ligases (CRLs) are responsible for the ubiquitination of many cellular proteins, thereby targeting them for proteasomal degradation. In most cases the substrates of the CRLs have not been identified, although many of those that are known have cancer relevance. MLN4924, an investigational small molecule that is a potent and selective inhibitor of the Nedd8-activating enzyme (NAE), is currently being explored in Phase I clinical trials. Inhibition of Nedd8-activating enzyme by MLN4924 prevents the conjugation of cullin proteins with NEDD8, resulting in inactivation of the entire family of CRLs. We have performed stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture analysis of A375 melanoma cells treated with MLN4924 to identify new CRL substrates, confidently identifying and quantitating 5122–6012 proteins per time point. Proteins such as MLX, EID1, KLF5, ORC6L, MAGEA6, MORF4L2, MRFAP1, MORF4L1, and TAX1BP1 are rapidly stabilized by MLN4924, suggesting that they are novel CRL substrates. Proteins up-regulated at later times were also identified and siRNA against their corresponding genes were used to evaluate their influence on MLN4924-induced cell death. Thirty-eight proteins were identified as being particularly important for the cytotoxicity of MLN4924. Strikingly, these proteins had roles in cell cycle, DNA damage repair, and ubiquitin transfer. Therefore, the combination of RNAi with stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture provides a paradigm for understanding the mechanism of action of novel agents affecting the ubiquitin proteasome system and a path to identifying mechanistic biomarkers.


Autophagy | 2015

Identification of a lung cancer cell line deficient in atg7-dependent autophagy

Jonathan Mandelbaum; Neil Rollins; Pooja Shah; Doug Bowman; Janice Y. Lee; Olga Tayber; Hugues Bernard; Patrick Leroy; Ping Li; Erik Koenig; James E. Brownell; Natalie Roy D'Amore

Autophagy is a major cellular process for bulk degradation of proteins and organelles in order to maintain metabolic homeostasis, and it represents an emerging target area for cancer. Initially proposed to be a cancer-restricting process for tumor initiation, recent studies suggest that autophagy can also promote cell survival in established tumors. ATG7 is an essential autophagy gene that encodes the E1 enzyme necessary for the lipidation of the LC3 family of ubiquitin-like proteins and autophagosome formation. In this study we identified a rare case of a cancer cell line, H1650 lung adenocarcinoma, which has lost ATG7 expression due to a focal biallelic deletion within the ATG7 locus. These cells displayed no evidence of ATG7 pathway activity; however, reconstituting the cells with wild-type ATG7 restored both LC3 lipidation and downstream autophagic consumption of autophagy substrates such as the SQSTM1/p62 protein. We characterized several phenotypes reported to be influenced by autophagy, and observed an ATG7-dependent increase in cell growth and clearance of proteasome-inhibitor induced protein aggregates. Cellular changes in mitochondrial metabolism or response to nutrient starvation were unaffected by ATG7 expression. In addition, parental H1650 cells that lacked ATG7 were still able to consume autophagy substrates SQSTM1, NBR1 and TAX1BP1 via a bafilomycin A1-sensitive pathway, suggesting that these proteins were not exclusively degraded by autophagy. Overall, these findings highlight a unique outlier instance of complete loss of ATG7-dependent autophagy in a cancer cell line. The H1650 cell line may be a useful system for future studies to further understand the role of autophagy in tumorigenesis and potential redundant pathways that allow cells to circumvent the loss of ATG7-dependent autophagy in cancer.


BMC Genomics | 2016

The beagle dog MicroRNA tissue atlas: identifying translatable biomarkers of organ toxicity

Erik Koenig; Craig Fisher; Hugues Bernard; Francis S. Wolenski; Joseph Gerrein; Mary Carsillo; Matt J. Gallacher; Aimy Tse; Rachel Peters; Aaron T. Smith; Alexa Meehan; Stephen Tirrell; Patrick Kirby

BackgroundMicroRNAs (miRNA) are varied in length, under 25 nucleotides, single-stranded noncoding RNA that regulate post-transcriptional gene expression via translational repression or mRNA degradation. Elevated levels of miRNAs can be detected in systemic circulation after tissue injury, suggesting that miRNAs are released following cellular damage. Because of their remarkable stability, ease of detection in biofluids, and tissue specific expression patterns, miRNAs have the potential to be specific biomarkers of organ injury. The identification of miRNA biomarkers requires a systematic approach: 1) determine the miRNA tissue expression profiles within a mammalian species via next generation sequencing; 2) identify enriched and/or specific miRNA expression within organs of toxicologic interest, and 3) in vivo validation with tissue-specific toxicants. While miRNA tissue expression has been reported in rodents and humans, little data exists on miRNA tissue expression in the dog, a relevant toxicology species. The generation and evaluation of the first dog miRNA tissue atlas is described here.ResultsAnalysis of 16 tissues from five male beagle dogs identified 106 tissue enriched miRNAs, 60 of which were highly enriched in a single organ, and thus may serve as biomarkers of organ injury. A proof of concept study in dogs dosed with hepatotoxicants evaluated a qPCR panel of 15 tissue enriched miRNAs specific to liver, heart, skeletal muscle, pancreas, testes, and brain. Dogs with elevated serum levels of miR-122 and miR-885 had a correlative increase of alanine aminotransferase, and microscopic analysis confirmed liver damage. Other non-liver enriched miRNAs included in the screening panel were unaffected. Eli Lilly authors created a complimentary Sprague Dawely rat miRNA tissue atlas and demonstrated increased pancreas enriched miRNA levels in circulation, following caerulein administration in rat and dog.ConclusionThe dog miRNA tissue atlas provides a resource for biomarker discovery and can be further mined with refinement of dog genome annotation. The 60 highly enriched tissue miRNAs identified within the dog miRNA tissue atlas could serve as diagnostic biomarkers and will require further validation by in vivo correlation to histopathology. Once validated, these tissue enriched miRNAs could be combined into a powerful qPCR screening panel to identify organ toxicity during early drug development.


Journal of Applied Toxicology | 2017

Identification of microRNA biomarker candidates in urine and plasma from rats with kidney or liver damage

Francis S. Wolenski; Pooja Shah; Tomoya Sano; Tadahiro Shinozawa; Hugues Bernard; Matt J. Gallacher; Shylah D. Wyllie; Georgianna Varrone; Lisa A. Cicia; Mary Carsillo; Craig Fisher; Sean Ottinger; Erik Koenig; Patrick Kirby

MicroRNAs (miRNA) are short single‐stranded RNA sequences that have a role in the post‐transcriptional regulation of genes. The identification of tissue specific or enriched miRNAs has great potential as novel safety biomarkers. One longstanding goal is to associate the increase of miRNA in biofluids (e.g., plasma and urine) with tissue‐specific damage. Next‐generation sequencing (miR‐seq) was used to analyze changes in miRNA profiles of tissue, plasma and urine samples of rats treated with either a nephrotoxicant (cisplatin) or one of two hepatotoxicants (acetaminophen [APAP] or carbon tetrachloride [CCL4]). Analyses with traditional serum chemistry and histopathology confirmed that toxicant‐induced organ damage was specific. In animals treated with cisplatin, levels of five miRNAs were significantly altered in the kidney, 14 in plasma and six in urine. In APAP‐treated animals, five miRNAs were altered in the liver, 74 in plasma and six in urine; for CCL4 the changes were five, 20 and 6, respectively. Cisplatin treatment caused an elevation of miR‐378a in the urine, confirming the findings of other similar studies. There were 17 in common miRNAs elevated in the plasma after treatment with either APAP or CCL4. Four of these (miR‐122, −802, −31a and −365) are known to be enriched in the livers of rats. Interestingly, the increase of serum miR‐802 in both hepatotoxicant treatments was comparable to that of the well‐known liver damage marker miR‐122. Taken together, comparative analysis of urine and plasma miRNAs demonstrated their utility as biomarkers of organ injury. Copyright


PLOS ONE | 2015

KRAS Genotype Correlates with Proteasome Inhibitor Ixazomib Activity in Preclinical In Vivo Models of Colon and Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: Potential Role of Tumor Metabolism

Nibedita Chattopadhyay; Allison Berger; Erik Koenig; Bret Bannerman; James Garnsey; Hugues Bernard; Paul Hales; Angel Maldonado Lopez; Yu Yang; Jill Donelan; Kristen Jordan; Stephen Tirrell; Bradley Stringer; Cindy Xia; Greg Hather; Katherine Galvin; Mark Manfredi; Nelson Rhodes; Ben Amidon

In non-clinical studies, the proteasome inhibitor ixazomib inhibits cell growth in a broad panel of solid tumor cell lines in vitro. In contrast, antitumor activity in xenograft tumors is model-dependent, with some solid tumors showing no response to ixazomib. In this study we examined factors responsible for ixazomib sensitivity or resistance using mouse xenograft models. A survey of 14 non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and 6 colon xenografts showed a striking relationship between ixazomib activity and KRAS genotype; tumors with wild-type (WT) KRAS were more sensitive to ixazomib than tumors harboring KRAS activating mutations. To confirm the association between KRAS genotype and ixazomib sensitivity, we used SW48 isogenic colon cancer cell lines. Either KRAS-G13D or KRAS-G12V mutations were introduced into KRAS-WT SW48 cells to generate cells that stably express activated KRAS. SW48 KRAS WT tumors, but neither SW48-KRAS-G13D tumors nor SW48-KRAS-G12V tumors, were sensitive to ixazomib in vivo. Since activated KRAS is known to be associated with metabolic reprogramming, we compared metabolite profiling of SW48-WT and SW48-KRAS-G13D tumors treated with or without ixazomib. Prior to treatment there were significant metabolic differences between SW48 WT and SW48-KRAS-G13D tumors, reflecting higher oxidative stress and glucose utilization in the KRAS-G13D tumors. Ixazomib treatment resulted in significant metabolic regulation, and some of these changes were specific to KRAS WT tumors. Depletion of free amino acid pools and activation of GCN2-eIF2α-pathways were observed both in tumor types. However, changes in lipid beta oxidation were observed in only the KRAS WT tumors. The non-clinical data presented here show a correlation between KRAS genotype and ixazomib sensitivity in NSCLC and colon xenografts and provide new evidence of regulation of key metabolic pathways by proteasome inhibition.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2015

Abstract C55: Nedd8-activating enzyme inhibitor pevonedistat synergizes with cisplatin and carboplatin through interference with nucleotide excision repair and interstrand cross-link repair mechanisms in non-small cell lung cancer

David C. Bouck; Khristofer Garcia; Jonathan L. Blank; Xiaozhen J. Liu; Hugues Bernard; Allison Berger; Mike Kuranda; Erik Koenig; Eric S. Lightcap

Platinum-based therapies, both cisplatin and carboplatin, are utilized as part of first-line standard of care regimens for advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), but overall response rate and overall survival remain limited, with a 5-year survival rate of 18%. Therefore, agents that can improve responses and survival are needed. Pevonedistat (MLN4924) is an investigational small molecule inhibitor of the Nedd8-activating enzyme (NAE) currently in Phase Ib clinical trials. Nedd8 is a small ubiquitin-like protein whose activation of the cullin family of E3 ubiquitin ligases is dependent on NAE activity. Importantly, pevonedistat synergized with carboplatin in a cell viability assay for 6 of 20 NSCLC cell lines tested in vitro, and synergy was also detected in the triple combination of carboplatin, pevonedistat, and paclitaxel. Order of addition experiments in the A549 NSCLC cell line demonstrated a benefit of simultaneous treatment or addition of pevonedistat prior to platinum treatment, while a reduced combination benefit was observed when cisplatin was added 24-48 hrs before pevonedistat. Levels of NAE pathway inhibition were similar in pevonedistat and pevonedistat+cisplatin treated cells, indicating that a drug-drug interaction was not likely the cause of the synergy. Using patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models a combination benefit of carboplatin and pevonedistat was demonstrated in a carboplatin-insensitive model but a similar improvement in response was not observed in a carboplatin-sensitive model, adding to evidence that pevonedistat might target platinum resistance mechanisms. To evaluate the mechanism of synergy between pevonedistat and platinum, in vitro experiments with RNAi were performed in 4 cell lines. These studies identified 2 mechanisms of synergy between pevonedistat and platinums in vitro. Depletion of genes within the TC-NER (transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair) and ICR (interstrand crosslink repair) pathways reduced the synergy between pevonedistat and platinum, with the contribution of each pathway varying by cell line. Because these pathways are also implicated in the response to single agent platinums, the results suggest pevonedistat could delay completion of platinum-induced DNA repair and therefore result in enhanced cell death. Inhibition of neddylation of the E3 ubiquitin ligase CUL4-RBX1-DDB1-ERCC8 by pevonedistat may delay the TC-NER pathway, providing a direct mechanism of resistance reversal by pevonedistat. The combination of pevonedistat with carboplatin and paclitaxel is under evaluation as part of a phase 1b trial in adult patients with solid tumors (NCT01862328). Citation Format: David C. Bouck, Khristofer Garcia, Jonathan L. Blank, Xiaozhen J. Liu, Hugues Bernard, Allison J. Berger, Mike Kuranda, Erik Koenig, Eric S. Lightcap. Nedd8-activating enzyme inhibitor pevonedistat synergizes with cisplatin and carboplatin through interference with nucleotide excision repair and interstrand cross-link repair mechanisms in non-small cell lung cancer. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR-NCI-EORTC International Conference: Molecular Targets and Cancer Therapeutics; 2015 Nov 5-9; Boston, MA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Mol Cancer Ther 2015;14(12 Suppl 2):Abstract nr C55.


Cancer Research | 2017

Abstract 1423: Nedd8-activating enzyme inhibitor pevonedistat synergizes with cisplatin and carboplatin through interference with nucleotide excision repair and interstrand cross-link repair mechanisms in non-small cell lung cancer

Xiaozhen Liu; David C. Bouck; Khristofer Garcia; Jonathan L. Blank; Hugues Bernard; Allison Berger; Mike Kuranda; Erik Koenig


Archive | 2010

HCV NS3/4A in complex with ligand 3

Margit Hagel; Deqiang Niu; T. St.Martin; Michael Sheets; Lixin Qiao; Hugues Bernard; Russell Karp; Zhiming Zhu; Matthew T. Labenski; Prasoon Chaturvedi; M. Nacht; William F. Westlin; Russell C. Petter; Juswinder Singh


Journal of Hepatology | 2009

962 PROTEIN SILENCING OF HEPATITIS C VIRUS PROTEASE WITH A SMALL MOLECULE INHIBITOR: DISCOVERY OF AVL-181

Deqiang Niu; Margit Hagel; Hugues Bernard; Lixin Qiao; M. Nacht; Russell C. Petter; Michael Sheets; Juswinder Singh; T.S. Martin; William F. Westlin

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Erik Koenig

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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Allison Berger

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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