Jerome Wielens
St. Vincent's Institute of Medical Research
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Featured researches published by Jerome Wielens.
Scientific Reports | 2015
David B. Ascher; Jerome Wielens; Tracy L. Nero; Larissa Doughty; Craig J. Morton; Michael W. Parker
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection affects more than 170 million people. The high genetic variability of HCV and the rapid development of drug-resistant strains are driving the urgent search for new direct-acting antiviral agents. A new class of agents has recently been developed that are believed to target the HCV protein NS5A although precisely where they interact and how they affect function is unknown. Here we describe an in vitro assay based on microscale thermophoresis and demonstrate that two clinically relevant inhibitors bind tightly to NS5A domain 1 and inhibit RNA binding. Conversely, RNA binding inhibits compound binding. The compounds bind more weakly to known resistance mutants L31V and Y93H. The compounds do not affect NS5A dimerisation. We propose that current NS5A inhibitors act by favouring a dimeric structure of NS5A that does not bind RNA.
Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2013
Jerome Wielens; Stephen J. Headey; David I. Rhodes; Roger J. Mulder; Olan Dolezal; John Joseph Deadman; Janet Newman; David K. Chalmers; Michael W. Parker; Thomas S. Peat; Martin J. Scanlon
Fragment screening is becoming widely accepted as a technique to identify hit compounds for the development of novel lead compounds. In neighboring laboratories, we have recently, and independently, performed a fragment screening campaign on the HIV-1 integrase core domain (IN) using similar commercially purchased fragment libraries. The two campaigns used different screening methods for the preliminary identification of fragment hits; one used saturation transfer difference nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (STD-NMR), and the other used surface plasmon resonance (SPR) spectroscopy. Both initial screens were followed by X-ray crystallography. Using the STD-NMR/X-ray approach, 15 IN/fragment complexes were identified, whereas the SPR/X-ray approach found 6 complexes. In this article, we compare the approaches that were taken by each group and the results obtained, and we look at what factors could potentially influence the final results. We find that despite using different approaches with little overlap of initial hits, both approaches identified binding sites on IN that provided a basis for fragment-based lead discovery and further lead development. Comparison of hits identified in the two studies highlights a key role for both the conditions under which fragment binding is measured and the criteria selected to classify hits.
Journal of Computer-aided Molecular Design | 2005
Jerome Wielens; Ian T. Crosby; David K. Chalmers
SummaryWhile the general features of HIV-1 integrase function are understood, there is still uncertainty about the composition of the integration complex and how integrase interacts with viral and host DNA. We propose an improved model of the integration complex based on current experimental evidence including a comparison with the homologous Tn5 transposase containing bound DNA and an analysis of DNA binding sites using Goodford’s GRID. Our model comprises a pair of integrase dimers, two strands of DNA to represent the viral DNA ends and a strand of bent DNA representing the host chromosome. In our model, the terminal four base pairs of each of the viral DNA strands interact with the integrase dimer providing the active site, while bases one turn away interact with a flexible loop (residues 186–194) on the second integrase dimer. We propose that residues E152, Q148 and K156 are involved in the specific recognition of the conserved CA dinucleotide and that the active site mobile loop (residues 140–149) stabilises the integration complex by acting as a barrier to separate the two viral DNA ends. In addition, the residues responsible for DNA binding in our model show a high level of amino acid conservation.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Jason J. Paxman; Natalie A. Borg; James Horne; Philip E. Thompson; Yanni Chin; Pooja Sharma; Jamie S. Simpson; Jerome Wielens; Susannah Piek; Charlene M. Kahler; Harry Sakellaris; Mary C. Pearce; Stephen P. Bottomley; Jamie Rossjohn; Martin J. Scanlon
Oxidative protein folding in Gram-negative bacteria results in the formation of disulfide bonds between pairs of cysteine residues. This is a multistep process in which the dithiol-disulfide oxidoreductase enzyme, DsbA, plays a central role. The structure of DsbA comprises an all helical domain of unknown function and a thioredoxin domain, where active site cysteines shuttle between an oxidized, substrate-bound, reduced form and a DsbB-bound form, where DsbB is a membrane protein that reoxidizes DsbA. Most DsbA enzymes interact with a wide variety of reduced substrates and show little specificity. However, a number of DsbA enzymes have now been identified that have narrow substrate repertoires and appear to interact specifically with a smaller number of substrates. The transient nature of the DsbA-substrate complex has hampered our understanding of the factors that govern the interaction of DsbA enzymes with their substrates. Here we report the crystal structure of a complex between Escherichia coli DsbA and a peptide with a sequence derived from a substrate. The binding site identified in the DsbA-peptide complex was distinct from that observed for DsbB in the DsbA-DsbB complex. The structure revealed details of the DsbA-peptide interaction and suggested a mechanism by which DsbA can simultaneously show broad specificity for substrates yet exhibit specificity for DsbB. This mode of binding was supported by solution nuclear magnetic resonance data as well as functional data, which demonstrated that the substrate specificity of DsbA could be modified via changes at the binding interface identified in the structure of the complex.
FEBS Letters | 2010
Jerome Wielens; Stephen J. Headey; Dharshini Jeevarajah; David I. Rhodes; John Joseph Deadman; David K. Chalmers; Martin J. Scanlon; Michael W. Parker
MINT‐7713125: IN (uniprotkb:P04585) and IN (uniprotkb:P04585) bind (MI:0407) by X‐ray crystallography (MI:0114)
ChemMedChem | 2011
Jerome Wielens; Stephen J. Headey; John Joseph Deadman; David I. Rhodes; Michael W. Parker; David K. Chalmers; Martin J. Scanlon
Fragment-based screening has been used to identify a novel ligand binding site on HIV-1 integrase. Crystal structures of fragments bound at this site (shown) have been used to design elaborated second-generation compounds that bind with higher affinity and good ligand efficiency.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Julian P. Vivian; Jessica Scoullar; Amy L. Robertson; Stephen P. Bottomley; James Horne; Yanni Chin; Jerome Wielens; Philip E. Thompson; Tony Velkov; Susannah Piek; Emma Byres; Travis Beddoe; Matthew C. J. Wilce; Charlene M. Kahler; Jamie Rossjohn; Martin J. Scanlon
DsbA is an enzyme found in the periplasm of Gram-negative bacteria that catalyzes the formation of disulfide bonds in a diverse array of protein substrates, many of which are involved in bacterial pathogenesis. Although most bacteria possess only a single essential DsbA, Neisseria meningitidis is unusual in that it possesses three DsbAs, although the reason for this additional redundancy is unclear. Two of these N. meningitidis enzymes (NmDsbA1 and NmDsbA2) play an important role in meningococcal attachment to human epithelial cells, whereas NmDsbA3 is considered to have a narrow substrate repertoire. To begin to address the role of DsbAs in the pathogenesis of N. meningitidis, we have determined the structure of NmDsbA3 to 2.3-Å resolution. Although the sequence identity between NmDsbA3 and other DsbAs is low, the NmDsbA3 structure adopted a DsbA-like fold. Consistent with this finding, we demonstrated that NmDsbA3 acts as a thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase in vitro and is reoxidized by Escherichia coli DsbB (EcDsbB). However, pronounced differences in the structures between DsbA3 and EcDsbA, which are clustered around the active site of the enzyme, suggested a structural basis for the unusual substrate specificity that is observed for NmDsbA3.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Annie Quan; Jing Xue; Jerome Wielens; Karen J. Smillie; Victor Anggono; Michael W. Parker; Michael A. Cousin; Mark E. Graham; Phillip J. Robinson
Syndapin I (PACSIN 1) is a synaptically enriched membrane tubulating protein that plays important roles in activity-dependent bulk endocytosis and neuronal morphogenesis. While syndapin I is an in vitro phosphoprotein, it is not known to be phosphorylated in neurons. Here, we report the identification of two phosphorylation sites, S76 and T181, of syndapin I from nerve terminals. Both residues are located at the N-terminal helix-capping motifs (N-Cap) of different α-helices in the F-BAR domain, important for F-BAR homodimer curvature and dimer-dimer filament assembly, respectively. Phospho-mimetic mutations of these residues regulate lipid-binding and tubulation both in vitro and in cells. Neither phosphosite regulated syndapin I function in activity-dependent bulk endocytosis. Rather, T181 phosphorylation was developmentally regulated and inhibited syndapin I function in neuronal morphogenesis. This suggests a novel mechanism for phosphorylation control of an F-BAR function through the regulation of α-helix interactions and stability within the folded F-BAR domain.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Sara Chuang; Tony Velkov; James Horne; Jerome Wielens; David K. Chalmers; Christopher J. H. Porter; Martin J. Scanlon
Liver-fatty acid binding protein (L-FABP) is found in high levels in enterocytes and is involved in cytosolic solubilization of fatty acids. In addition, L-FABP has been shown to bind endogenous and exogenous lipophilic compounds, suggesting that it may also play a role in modulating their absorption and disposition within enterocytes. Previously, we have described binding of L-FABP to a range of drugs, including a series of fibrates. In the present study, we have generated structural models of L-FABP-fibrate complexes and undertaken thermodynamic analysis of the binding of fibrates containing either a carboxylic acid or ester functionality. Analysis of the current data reveals that both the location and the energetics of binding are different for fibrates that contain a carboxylate compared to those that do not. As such, the data presented in this study suggest potential mechanisms that underpin molecular recognition and dictate specificity in the interaction between fibrates and L-FABP.
Journal of Molecular Recognition | 2011
Indalecio Quesada-Soriano; Lorien J. Parker; Alessandra Primavera; Jerome Wielens; Jessica K. Holien; Juan M. Casas-Solvas; Antonio Vargas-Berenguel; Ana Aguilera; Marzia Nuccetelli; Anna Paola Mazzetti; Mario Lo Bello; Michael W. Parker; Luis García-Fuentes
The diuretic drug ethacrynic acid (EA), both an inhibitor and substrate of pi class glutathione S‐transferase (GST P1‐1), has been tested in clinical trials as an adjuvant in chemotherapy. We recently studied the role of the active site residue Tyr‐108 in binding EA to the enzyme and found that the analysis was complicated by covalent binding of this drug to the highly reactive Cys‐47. Previous attempts to eliminate this binding by chemical modification yielded ambiguous results and therefore we decided here to produce a double mutant C47S/Y108V by site directed mutagenesis and further expression in Escherichia coli and the interaction of EA and its GSH conjugate (EASG) examined by calorimetric studies and X‐ray diffraction. Surprisingly, in the absence of Cys‐47, Cys‐101 (located at the dimer interface) becomes a target for modification by EA, albeit at a lower conjugation rate than Cys‐47. The Cys‐47 → Ser mutation in the double mutant enzyme induces a positive cooperativity between the two subunits when ligands with affinity to G‐site bind to enzyme. However, this mutation does not seem to affect the thermodynamic properties of ligand binding to the electrophilic binding site (H‐site) and the thermal or chemical stability of this double mutant does not significantly affect the unfolding mechanism in either the absence or presence of ligand. Crystal structures of apo and an EASG complex are essentially identical with a few exceptions in the H‐site and in the water network at the dimer interface. Copyright