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Dive into the research topics where Hyun Seop Tae is active.

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Featured researches published by Hyun Seop Tae.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2011

Small-molecule hydrophobic tagging–induced degradation of HaloTag fusion proteins

Taavi K. Neklesa; Hyun Seop Tae; Ashley R. Schneekloth; Michael J. Stulberg; Timothy W. Corson; Thomas B. Sundberg; Kanak Raina; Scott A. Holley; Craig M. Crews

The ability to regulate any protein of interest in living systems with small molecules remains a challenge. We hypothesized that appending a hydrophobic moiety to the surface of a protein would mimic the partially denatured state of the protein, thus engaging the cellular quality control machinery to induce its proteasomal degradation. We designed and synthesized bifunctional small molecules that bind a bacterial dehalogenase (HaloTag protein) and present a hydrophobic group on its surface. Remarkably, hydrophobic tagging of the HaloTag protein with an adamantyl moiety induced the degradation of cytosolic, isoprenylated, and transmembrane fusion proteins in cell culture. We demonstrated the in vivo utility of hydrophobic tagging by degrading proteins expressed in zebrafish embryos and by inhibiting RasG12V-driven tumor progression in mice. Therefore, hydrophobic tagging of HaloTag fusion proteins affords small molecule control over any protein of interest, making it an ideal system for validating potential drug targets in disease models.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Targeting the von Hippel–Lindau E3 Ubiquitin Ligase Using Small Molecules To Disrupt the VHL/HIF-1α Interaction

Dennis L. Buckley; Inge Van Molle; Peter C. Gareiss; Hyun Seop Tae; Julien Michel; Devin J. Noblin; William L. Jorgensen; Alessio Ciulli; Craig M. Crews

E3 ubiquitin ligases, which bind protein targets, leading to their ubiquitination and subsequent degradation, are attractive drug targets due to their exquisite substrate specificity. However, the development of small-molecule inhibitors has proven extraordinarily challenging as modulation of E3 ligase activities requires the targeting of protein–protein interactions. Using rational design, we have generated the first small molecule targeting the von Hippel–Lindau protein (VHL), the substrate recognition subunit of an E3 ligase, and an important target in cancer, chronic anemia, and ischemia. We have also obtained the crystal structure of VHL bound to our most potent inhibitor, confirming that the compound mimics the binding mode of the transcription factor HIF-1α, a substrate of VHL. These results have the potential to guide future development of improved lead compounds as therapeutics for the treatment of chronic anemia and ischemia.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2008

Targeted intracellular protein degradation induced by a small molecule: En route to chemical proteomics

Ashley R. Schneekloth; Mathieu Pucheault; Hyun Seop Tae; Craig M. Crews

We have developed a heterobifunctional all-small molecule PROTAC (PROteolysis TArgeting Chimera) capable of inducing proteasomal degradation of the androgen receptor. This cell permeable PROTAC consists of a non-steroidal androgen receptor ligand (SARM) and the MDM2 ligand known as nutlin, connected by a PEG-based linker. The SARM-nutlin PROTAC recruits the androgen receptor to MDM2, which functions as an E3 ubiquitin ligase. This leads to the ubiquitination of the androgen receptor, and its subsequent degradation by the proteasome. Upon treatment of HeLa cells with 10microM PROTAC for 7h, we were able to observe a decrease in androgen receptor levels. This degradation is proteasome dependent, as it is mitigated in cells pre-treated with 10microM epoxomicin, a specific proteasome inhibitor. These results have implications for the potential study and treatment of various cancers with increased androgen receptor levels.


Angewandte Chemie | 2012

Small-molecule inhibitors of the interaction between the E3 ligase VHL and HIF1α.

Dennis L. Buckley; Jeffrey L. Gustafson; Inge Van Molle; Anke G. Roth; Hyun Seop Tae; Peter C. Gareiss; William L. Jorgensen; Alessio Ciulli; Craig M. Crews

E3 ubiquitin ligases, such as the therapeutically relevant VHL, are challenging targets for traditional medicinal chemistry, as their modulation requires targeting protein-protein interactions. We report novel small-molecule inhibitors of the interaction between VHL and its molecular target HIF1α, a transcription factor involved in oxygen sensing.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2014

Pharmacological targeting of the pseudokinase Her3

Ting Xie; Sang M in Lim; Kenneth D. Westover; Michael E. Dodge; Dalia Ercan; Scott B. Ficarro; Durga Udayakumar; Deepak Gurbani; Hyun Seop Tae; Steven M. Riddle; Taebo Sim; Jarrod A. Marto; Pasi A. Jänne; Craig M. Crews; Nathanael S. Gray

Her3 (ErbB3) belongs to the epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinases and is well credentialed as an anti-cancer target but is thought to be “undruggable” using ATP-competitive small molecules because it lacks significant kinase activity. Here we report the first selective Her3 ligand, TX1-85-1, that forms a covalent bond with Cys721 located in the ATP-binding site of Her3. We demonstrate that covalent modification of Her3 inhibits Her3 signaling but not proliferation in some Her3 dependent cancer cell lines. Subsequent derivatization with a hydrophobic adamantane moiety demonstrates that the resultant bivalent ligand (TX2-121-1) enhances inhibition of Her3 dependent signaling. Treatment of cells with TX2-121-1 results in partial degradation of Her3 and serendipitously interferes with productive heterodimerization between Her3 with either Her2 or c-Met. These results suggest that small molecules will be capable of perturbing the biological function of Her3 and the approximately 60 other pseudokinases found in human cells.


ChemBioChem | 2012

Identification of hydrophobic tags for the degradation of stabilized proteins.

Hyun Seop Tae; Thomas B. Sundberg; Taavi K. Neklesa; Devin J. Noblin; Jeffrey L. Gustafson; Anke G. Roth; Kanak Raina; Craig M. Crews

New HyTs are a knockout: we previously reported that labeling HaloTag proteins with low molecular weight hydrophobic tags (HyTs) leads to targeted degradation of HaloTag fusion proteins. In this report, we employed a chemical approach to extend this hydrophobic tagging methodology to highly stabilized proteins by synthesizing and evaluating a library of HyTs, which led to the identification of HyT36.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Small‐Molecule‐Mediated Degradation of the Androgen Receptor through Hydrophobic Tagging

Jeffrey L. Gustafson; Taavi K. Neklesa; Carly S. Cox; Anke G. Roth; Dennis L. Buckley; Hyun Seop Tae; Thomas B. Sundberg; D. Blake Stagg; John Hines; Donald P. McDonnell; John D. Norris; Craig M. Crews

Androgen receptor (AR)-dependent transcription is a major driver of prostate tumor cell proliferation. Consequently, it is the target of several antitumor chemotherapeutic agents, including the AR antagonist MDV3100/enzalutamide. Recent studies have shown that a single AR mutation (F876L) converts MDV3100 action from an antagonist to an agonist. Here we describe the generation of a novel class of selective androgen receptor degraders (SARDs) to address this resistance mechanism. Molecules containing hydrophobic degrons linked to small-molecule AR ligands induce AR degradation, reduce expression of AR target genes and inhibit proliferation in androgen-dependent prostate cancer cell lines. These results suggest that selective AR degradation may be an effective therapeutic prostate tumor strategy in the context of AR mutations that confer resistance to second-generation AR antagonists.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Basic peptide-morpholino oligomer conjugate that is very effective in killing bacteria by gene-specific and nonspecific modes

Donna Wesolowski; Hyun Seop Tae; Neeru Gandotra; Paula Montero Llopis; Ning Shen; Sidney Altman

Basic peptides covalently linked to nucleic acids, or chemically modified nucleic acids, enable the insertion of such a conjugate into bacteria grown in liquid medium and mammalian cells in tissue culture. A unique peptide, derived from human T cells, has been employed in a chemical synthesis to make a conjugate with a morpholino oligonucleotide. This new conjugate is at least 10- to 100-fold more effective than previous peptides used in altering the phenotype of host bacteria if the external guide sequence methodology is employed in these experiments. Bacteria with target genes expressing chloramphenicol resistance, penicillin resistance, or gyrase A function can effectively be reduced in their expression and the host cells killed. Several bacteria are susceptible to this treatment, which has a broad range of potency. The loss in viability of bacteria is not due only to complementarity with a target RNA and the action of RNase P, but also to a non-gene-specific tight binding of the complexed nontargeted RNA to the basic polypeptide-morpholino oligonucleotide.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Gene selective mRNA cleavage inhibits the development of Plasmodium falciparum.

Yoann Augagneur; Donna Wesolowski; Hyun Seop Tae; Sidney Altman; Choukri Ben Mamoun

Unique peptide-morpholino oligomer (PMO) conjugates have been designed to bind and promote the cleavage of specific mRNA as a tool to inhibit gene function and parasite growth. The new conjugates were validated using the P. falciparum gyrase mRNA as a target (PfGyrA). Assays in vitro demonstrated a selective degradation of the PfGyrA mRNA directed by the external guide sequences, which are morpholino oligomers in the conjugates. Fluorescence microscopy revealed that labeled conjugates are delivered into Plasmodium-infected erythrocytes during all intraerythrocytic stages of parasite development. Consistent with the expression of PfGyrA in all stages of parasite development, proliferation assays showed that these conjugates have potent antimalarial activity, blocking early development, maturation, and replication of the parasite. The conjugates were equally effective against drug sensitive and resistant P. falciparum strains. The potency, selectivity, and predicted safety of PMO conjugates make this approach attractive for the development of a unique class of target-specific antimalarials and for large-scale functional analysis of the malarial genome.


Organic Letters | 2010

Total Synthesis and Biological Evaluation of Tyroscherin

Hyun Seop Tae; John Hines; Ashley R. Schneekloth; Craig M. Crews

The efficient synthesis and biological evaluation of both the reported and revised structures of tyroscherin have been achieved. Central to our synthesis is a cross metathesis reaction that generated the trans-olefin regioselectively. This synthetic strategy enabled the facile manipulation of tyroscherin stereochemistry, facilitating the generation of all 16 tyroscherin diastereomers and a photoactivatable tyroscherin-based affinity probe for future mode of action studies.

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