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Dive into the research topics where James Arthur Thomson is active.

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Featured researches published by James Arthur Thomson.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Crystallographic Identification of a Noncompetitive Inhibitor Binding Site on the Hepatitis C Virus NS5B RNA Polymerase Enzyme

Robert A. Love; Hans E. Parge; Xiu Yu; Michael J. Hickey; Wade Diehl; Jingjin Gao; Hilary Wriggers; Anne Ekker; Liann Wang; James Arthur Thomson; Peter S. Dragovich; Shella A. Fuhrman

ABSTRACT The virus-encoded nonstructural protein 5B (NS5B) of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase and is absolutely required for replication of the virus. NS5B exhibits significant differences from cellular polymerases and therefore has become an attractive target for anti-HCV therapy. Using a high-throughput screen, we discovered a novel NS5B inhibitor that binds to the enzyme noncompetitively with respect to nucleotide substrates. Here we report the crystal structure of NS5B complexed with this small molecule inhibitor. Unexpectedly, the inhibitor is bound within a narrow cleft on the proteins surface in the “thumb” domain, about 30 Å from the enzymes catalytic center. The interaction between this inhibitor and NS5B occurs without dramatic changes to the structure of the protein, and sequence analysis suggests that the binding site is conserved across known HCV genotypes. Possible mechanisms of inhibition include perturbation of protein dynamics, interference with RNA binding, and disruption of enzyme oligomerization.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009

Structure-based design of novel human Pin1 inhibitors (I).

Chuangxing Guo; Xinjun Hou; Liming Dong; Eleanor Dagostino; Samantha Greasley; RoseAnn Ferre; Joseph Marakovits; M. Catherine Johnson; David Matthews; Barbara Mroczkowski; Hans E. Parge; Todd VanArsdale; Ian Popoff; Joseph Piraino; Stephen Margosiak; James Arthur Thomson; Gerrit Los; Brion W. Murray

Pin1 is a member of the cis-trans peptidyl-prolyl isomerase family with potential anti-cancer therapeutic value. Here we report structure-based de novo design and optimization of novel Pin1 inhibitors. Without a viable lead from internal screenings, we designed a series of novel Pin1 inhibitors by interrogating and exploring a protein crystal structure of Pin1. The ligand efficiency of the initial concept molecule was optimized with integrated SBDD and parallel chemistry approaches, resulting in a more attractive lead series.


Biochemistry | 2008

Glucose modulation of glucokinase activation by small molecules.

Erik C. Ralph; James Arthur Thomson; Jonathan Almaden; Shaoxian Sun

Small molecule activators of glucokinase (GK) were used in kinetic and equilibrium binding studies to probe the biochemical basis for their allosteric effects. These small molecules decreased the glucose K 0.5 ( approximately 1 mM vs approximately 8 mM) and the glucose cooperativity (Hill coefficient of 1.2 vs 1.7) and lowered the k cat to various degrees (62-95% of the control activity). These activators relieved GKs inhibition from glucokinase regulatory protein (GKRP) in a glucose-dependent manner and activated GK to the same extent as control reactions in the absence of GKRP. In equilibrium binding studies, the intrinsic glucose affinity to the activator-bound enzyme was determined and demonstrated a 700-fold increase relative to the apoenzyme. This is consistent with a reduction in apparent glucose K D and the steady-state parameter K 0.5 as a result of enzyme equilibrium shifting to the activator-bound form. The binding of small molecules to GK was dependent on glucose, consistent with the structural evidence for an allosteric binding site which is present in the glucose-induced, active enzyme form of GK and absent in the inactive apoenzyme [Kamata et al. (2004) Structure 12, 429-438]. A mechanistic model that brings together the kinetic and structural data is proposed which allows qualitative and quantitative analysis of the glucose-dependent GK regulation by small molecules. The regulation of GK activation by glucose may have an important implication for the discovery and design of GK activators as potential antidiabetic agents.


Biochemistry | 1990

pH dependence of the urea and guanidine hydrochloride denaturation of ribonuclease A and ribonuclease T1

C. Nick Pace; Douglas V. Laurents; James Arthur Thomson


Biochemistry | 1992

Thermodynamics of ribonuclease T1 denaturation

Cui Qing Hu; Julian M. Sturtevant; James Arthur Thomson; Rick E. Erickson; C. Nick Pace


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2004

Crystal structure of human ABAD/HSD10 with a bound inhibitor: implications for design of Alzheimer's disease therapeutics

Charles R. Kissinger; Paul A. Rejto; Laura A. Pelletier; James Arthur Thomson; Richard Showalter; Melwyn A. Abreo; Charles S. Agree; Stephen Margosiak; Jerry J. Meng; Robert M. Aust; Darin Vanderpool; Bin Li; Anna Tempczyk-Russell; J. Ernest Villafranca


Biochemistry | 2006

Glucose-Induced Conformational Changes in Glucokinase Mediate Allosteric Regulation: Transient Kinetic Analysis

Vladi V. Heredia; James Arthur Thomson; David O. Nettleton; Shaoxian Sun


Biochemistry | 1997

Energetics of heme binding to native and denatured states of cytochrome b562

Clifford R. Robinson; Yufeng Liu; James Arthur Thomson; Julian M. Sturtevant; Stephen G. Sligar


Biochemistry | 1994

Thermodynamic and structural consequences of changing a sulfur atom to a methylene group in the M13Nle mutation in ribonuclease-S

James Arthur Thomson; Girish S. Ratnaparkhi; Raghavan Varadarajan; Julian M. Sturtevant; Frederic M. Richards


Archive | 2006

Human monoclonal antibodies to activin receptor-like kinase-1

Michael Aidan North; Karin Kristina Amundson; Vahe Bedian; Shelley Sims Belouski; Dana Hu-Lowe; Xin Jiang; Shannon Marie Karlicek; Sirid Aimee Kellerman; James Arthur Thomson; Jianying Wang; Grant Raymond Wickman; Jingchuan Zhang

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