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Dive into the research topics where Ian P. Street is active.

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Featured researches published by Ian P. Street.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2005

SOCS2 negatively regulates growth hormone action in vitro and in vivo

Christopher J. Greenhalgh; Elizabeth Rico-Bautista; Mattias Lorentzon; Anne L. Thaus; Phillip O. Morgan; Tracy A. Willson; Panagiota Zervoudakis; Donald Metcalf; Ian P. Street; Nicos A. Nicola; Andrew D. Nash; Louis Fabri; Gunnar Norstedt; Claes Ohlsson; Amilcar Flores-Morales; Warren S. Alexander; Douglas J. Hilton

Mice deficient in SOCS2 display an excessive growth phenotype characterized by a 30-50% increase in mature body size. Here we show that the SOCS2-/- phenotype is dependent upon the presence of endogenous growth hormone (GH) and that treatment with exogenous GH induced excessive growth in mice lacking both endogenous GH and SOCS2. This was reflected in terms of overall body weight, body and bone lengths, and the weight of internal organs and tissues. A heightened response to GH was also measured by examining GH-responsive genes expressed in the liver after exogenous GH administration. To further understand the link between SOCS2 and the GH-signaling cascade, we investigated the nature of these interactions using structure/function and biochemical interaction studies. Analysis of the 3 structural motifs of the SOCS2 molecule revealed that each plays a crucial role in SOCS2 function, with the conserved SOCS-box motif being essential for all inhibitory function. SOCS2 was found to bind 2 phosphorylated tyrosines on the GH receptor, and mutational analysis of these amino acids showed that both were essential for SOCS2 function. Together, the data provide clear evidence that SOCS2 is a negative regulator of GH signaling.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2013

Structure-guided design of a selective BCL-XL inhibitor

Guillaume Lessene; Peter E. Czabotar; Brad E. Sleebs; Kerry Zobel; Kym N. Lowes; Jerry M. Adams; Jonathan B. Baell; Peter M. Colman; Kurt Deshayes; Wayne J. Fairbrother; John A. Flygare; Paul Gibbons; Wilhelmus J A Kersten; Sanjitha Kulasegaram; Rebecca M. Moss; John P. Parisot; Brian J. Smith; Ian P. Street; Hong Yang; David C. S. Huang; Keith Geoffrey Watson

The prosurvival BCL-2 family protein BCL-X(L) is often overexpressed in solid tumors and renders malignant tumor cells resistant to anticancer therapeutics. Enhancing apoptotic responses by inhibiting BCL-X(L) will most likely have widespread utility in cancer treatment and, instead of inhibiting multiple prosurvival BCL-2 family members, a BCL-X(L)-selective inhibitor would be expected to minimize the toxicity to normal tissues. We describe the use of a high-throughput screen to discover a new series of small molecules targeting BCL-X(L) and their structure-guided development by medicinal chemistry. The optimized compound, WEHI-539 (7), has high affinity (subnanomolar) and selectivity for BCL-X(L) and potently kills cells by selectively antagonizing its prosurvival activity. WEHI-539 will be an invaluable tool for distinguishing the roles of BCL-X(L) from those of its prosurvival relatives, both in normal cells and notably in malignant tumor cells, many of which may prove to rely upon BCL-X(L) for their sustained growth.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Dihydroquinazolines as a Novel Class of Trypanosoma brucei Trypanothione Reductase Inhibitors: Discovery, Synthesis, and Characterization of their Binding Mode by Protein Crystallography

Stephen Patterson; Magnus S. Alphey; Deuan C. Jones; Emma Shanks; Ian P. Street; Julie A. Frearson; Paul G. Wyatt; Ian H. Gilbert; Alan H. Fairlamb

Trypanothione reductase (TryR) is a genetically validated drug target in the parasite Trypanosoma brucei, the causative agent of human African trypanosomiasis. Here we report the discovery, synthesis, and development of a novel series of TryR inhibitors based on a 3,4-dihydroquinazoline scaffold. In addition, a high resolution crystal structure of TryR, alone and in complex with substrates and inhibitors from this series, is presented. This represents the first report of a high resolution complex between a noncovalent ligand and this enzyme. Structural studies revealed that upon ligand binding the enzyme undergoes a conformational change to create a new subpocket which is occupied by an aryl group on the ligand. Therefore, the inhibitor, in effect, creates its own small binding pocket within the otherwise large, solvent exposed active site. The TryR–ligand structure was subsequently used to guide the synthesis of inhibitors, including analogues that challenged the induced subpocket. This resulted in the development of inhibitors with improved potency against both TryR and T. brucei parasites in a whole cell assay.


Disease Models & Mechanisms | 2013

An in vivo large-scale chemical screening platform using Drosophila for anti-cancer drug discovery

Lee F. Willoughby; Tanja Schlosser; Samuel A. Manning; John P. Parisot; Ian P. Street; Helena E. Richardson; Patrick O. Humbert; Anthony M. Brumby

SUMMARY Anti-cancer drug development involves enormous expenditure and risk. For rapid and economical identification of novel, bioavailable anti-tumour chemicals, the use of appropriate in vivo tumour models suitable for large-scale screening is key. Using a Drosophila Ras-driven tumour model, we demonstrate that tumour overgrowth can be curtailed by feeding larvae with chemicals that have the in vivo pharmacokinetics essential for drug development and known efficacy against human tumour cells. We then develop an in vivo 96-well plate chemical screening platform to carry out large-scale chemical screening with the tumour model. In a proof-of-principle pilot screen of 2000 compounds, we identify the glutamine analogue, acivicin, a chemical with known activity against human tumour cells, as a potent and specific inhibitor of Drosophila tumour formation. RNAi-mediated knockdown of candidate acivicin target genes implicates an enzyme involved in pyrimidine biosynthesis, CTP synthase, as a possible crucial target of acivicin-mediated inhibition. Thus, the pilot screen has revealed that Drosophila tumours are glutamine-dependent, which is an emerging feature of many human cancers, and has validated the platform as a powerful and economical tool for in vivo chemical screening. The platform can also be adapted for use with other disease models, thus offering widespread applications in drug development.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Quinazoline Sulfonamides as Dual Binders of the Proteins B-Cell Lymphoma 2 and B-Cell Lymphoma Extra Long with Potent Proapoptotic Cell-Based Activity

Brad E. Sleebs; Peter E. Czabotar; Wayne J. Fairbrother; W. Douglas Fairlie; John A. Flygare; David C. S. Huang; Wilhelmus J A Kersten; Michael F. T. Koehler; Guillaume Lessene; Kym N. Lowes; John P. Parisot; Brian J. Smith; Morey L. Smith; Andrew J. Souers; Ian P. Street; Hong Yang; Jonathan B. Baell

ABT-737 and ABT-263 are potent inhibitors of the BH3 antiapoptotic proteins, Bcl-x(L) and Bcl-2. This class of putative anticancer agents invariantly contains an acylsulfonamide core. We have designed and synthesized a series of novel quinazoline-based inhibitors of Bcl-2 and Bcl-x(L) that contain a heterocyclic alternative to the acylsulfonamide. These compounds exhibit submicromolar, mechanism-based activity in human small-cell lung carcinoma cell lines in the presence of 10% human serum. This comprises the first successful demonstration of a quinazoline sulfonamide core serving as an effective benzoylsulfonamide bioisostere. Additionally, these novel quinazolines comprise only the second known class of Bcl-2 family protein inhibitors to induce mechanism-based cell death.


Carbohydrate Research | 1986

The synthesis and hydrolysis of a series of deoxyfluoro-d-glucopyranosyl phosphates

Stephen G. Withers; David MacLennan; Ian P. Street

Abstract The synthesis of all four deoxyfluoro-α- d -glucopyranosyl phosphates is described. Rate constants for their acid-catalyzed hydrolysis were determined, and fluorine substitution was shown to have a significant effect in lowering the rate, particularly when the substitution is adjacent to the anomeric center. Relative rate-constants measured in m HClO 4 at 25° are 60.30:1.00:7.05:3.97:16.5 for α- d -glucopyranosyl phosphate and the 2-, 3-, 4- and 6-deoxyfluoro derivatives, respectively. The hydrolysis of 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-α- d -glucopyranosyl phosphate was studied in more detail, and an activation entropy and enthalpy of 4.1 e.u. ( m reactant) and 113.5 kJ.mol −1 , respectively, were determined for hydrolysis in m HClO 4 at 60° The pH dependence of its hydrolysis was investigated, and rate constants for hydrolysis of the monoanion ( k M = 1.88 × 10 −6 s −1 ) and neutral ( k N = 6.23 × 10 −5 s −1 ) species were thus extracted. Hydrolysis of the monoanion is not significantly affected by fluorine substitution, as expected. The ability or inability of several mechanistically distinct enzymes to utilize these fluorinated substrates is rationalized in the light of these findings.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2009

Trypanothione Reductase High-Throughput Screening Campaign Identifies Novel Classes of Inhibitors with Antiparasitic Activity

Georgina A. Holloway; William N. Charman; Alan H. Fairlamb; Reto Brun; Marcel Kaiser; Edmund S. Kostewicz; Patrizia M. Novello; John P. Parisot; John Richardson; Ian P. Street; Keith Geoffrey Watson; Jonathan B. Baell

ABSTRACT High-throughput screening of 100,000 lead-like compounds led to the identification of nine novel chemical classes of trypanothione reductase (TR) inhibitors worthy of further investigation. Hits from five of these chemical classes have been developed further through different combinations of preliminary structure-activity relationship rate probing and assessment of antiparasitic activity, cytotoxicity, and chemical and in vitro metabolic properties. This has led to the identification of novel TR inhibitor chemotypes that are drug-like and display antiparasitic activity. For one class, a series of analogues have displayed a correlation between TR inhibition and antiparasitic activity. This paper explores the process of identifying, investigating, and evaluating a series of hits from a high-throughput screening campaign.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Discovery of potent and selective benzothiazole hydrazone inhibitors of Bcl-XL.

Brad E. Sleebs; Wilhelmus J A Kersten; Sanjitha Kulasegaram; George Nikolakopoulos; Effie Hatzis; Rebecca M. Moss; John P. Parisot; Hong Yang; Peter E. Czabotar; W. Douglas Fairlie; Erinna F. Lee; Jerry M. Adams; Lin Chen; Mark F. van Delft; Kym N. Lowes; Andrew Wei; David C. S. Huang; Peter M. Colman; Ian P. Street; Jonathan B. Baell; Keith Geoffrey Watson; Guillaume Lessene

Developing potent molecules that inhibit Bcl-2 family mediated apoptosis affords opportunities to treat cancers via reactivation of the cell death machinery. We describe the hit-to-lead development of selective Bcl-XL inhibitors originating from a high-throughput screening campaign. Small structural changes to the hit compound increased binding affinity more than 300-fold (to IC50 < 20 nM). This molecular series exhibits drug-like characteristics, low molecular weights (Mw < 450), and unprecedented selectivity for Bcl-XL. Surface plasmon resonance experiments afford strong evidence of binding affinity within the hydrophobic groove of Bcl-XL. Biological experiments using engineered Mcl-1 deficient mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs, reliant only on Bcl-XL for survival) and Bax/Bak deficient MEFs (insensitive to selective activation of Bcl-2-driven apoptosis) support a mechanism-based induction of apoptosis. This manuscript describes the first series of selective small-molecule inhibitors of Bcl-XL and provides promising leads for the development of efficacious therapeutics against solid tumors and chemoresistant cancer cell lines.


Carbohydrate Research | 1989

The synthesis and hydrolysis of a series of deoxy- and deoxyfluoro-α-d- “glucopyranosyl” phosphates

Stephen G. Withers; M. David Percival; Ian P. Street

Abstract The syntheses of three deoxy-α- d - “glucopyranosyl” phosphates and a series of dideoxymonofluoro- and dideoxydifluoro-α- d -glucopyranosyl phosphates are described. Rate constants for their acid-catalyzed hydrolysis were determined. Deoxygenation in the sugar ring was shown to increase the hydrolysis rate to the extent seen previously for acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of a series of phenyl deoxy- d - “glucopyranosides” [Mega and Matsushima, J. Biochem. Tokyo, 94 (1983) 1637]. This demonstrates that the transition states for these two reactions are essentially identical. By determining the rates of hydrolysis of a series of deoxy- and deoxyfluoro-substituted 6-deoxy-6-fluoro-α- d -glucopyranosyl phosphates, substituent effects on the sugar ring were demonstrated to be predictably additive and primarily electronic in nature, with no evidence of contributions from steric effects.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2013

Characterization of the Novel Broad-Spectrum Kinase Inhibitor CTx-0294885 As an Affinity Reagent for Mass Spectrometry-Based Kinome Profiling

Luxi Zhang; Ian Peter Holmes; Falko Hochgräfe; Scott Raymond Walker; Naveid Ali; Emily S. Humphrey; Jianmin Wu; Melanie de Silva; Wilhelmus J A Kersten; Theresa Connor; Hendrik Falk; Lynda Allan; Ian P. Street; John D. Bentley; Patricia A. Pilling; Brendon J. Monahan; Thomas S. Peat; Roger J. Daly

Kinase enrichment utilizing broad-spectrum kinase inhibitors enables the identification of large proportions of the expressed kinome by mass spectrometry. However, the existing inhibitors are still inadequate in covering the entire kinome. Here, we identified a novel bisanilino pyrimidine, CTx-0294885, exhibiting inhibitory activity against a broad range of kinases in vitro, and further developed it into a Sepharose-supported kinase capture reagent. Use of a quantitative proteomics approach confirmed the selectivity of CTx-0294885-bound beads for kinase enrichment. Large-scale CTx-0294885-based affinity purification followed by LC-MS/MS led to the identification of 235 protein kinases from MDA-MB-231 cells, including all members of the AKT family that had not been previously detected by other broad-spectrum kinase inhibitors. Addition of CTx-0294885 to a mixture of three kinase inhibitors commonly used for kinase-enrichment increased the number of kinase identifications to 261, representing the largest kinome coverage from a single cell line reported to date. Coupling phosphopeptide enrichment with affinity purification using the four inhibitors enabled the identification of 799 high-confidence phosphosites on 183 kinases, ∼10% of which were localized to the activation loop, and included previously unreported phosphosites on BMP2K, MELK, HIPK2, and PRKDC. Therefore, CTx-0294885 represents a powerful new reagent for analysis of kinome signaling networks that may facilitate development of targeted therapeutic strategies. Proteomics data have been deposited to the ProteomeXchange Consortium ( http://proteomecentral.proteomexchange.org ) via the PRIDE partner repository with the data set identifier PXD000239.

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Stephen G. Withers

University of British Columbia

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Hendrik Falk

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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John P. Parisot

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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Brad E. Sleebs

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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Guillaume Lessene

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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Hong Yang

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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Keith Geoffrey Watson

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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Wilhelmus J A Kersten

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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Brendon J. Monahan

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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