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Dive into the research topics where Jerry L. Hopkins is active.

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Featured researches published by Jerry L. Hopkins.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2003

The design of potent hydrazones and disulfides as cathepsin S inhibitors.

Charles L. Cywin; Raymond A. Firestone; Daniel W. McNeil; Christine A. Grygon; Kathryn M Crane; Della White; Peter R Kinkade; Jerry L. Hopkins; Walter Davidson; Mark E. Labadia; Jessi Wildeson; Maurice M. Morelock; Jeffrey D Peterson; Ernest L. Raymond; Maryanne L. Brown; Denice M. Spero

The design and synthesis of dipeptidyl disulfides and dipeptidyl benzoylhydrazones as selective inhibitors of the cysteine protease Cathepsin S are described. These inhibitors were expected to form a slowly reversible covalent adduct of the active site cysteine of Cathepsin S. Formation of the initial adduct was confirmed by mass spectral analysis. The nature and mechanism of these adducts was explored. Kinetic analysis of the benzoyl hydrazones indicate that these inhibitors are acting as irreversible inhibitors of Cathepsin S. Additionally, the benzoylhydrazones were shown to be potent inhibitors of Cathepsin S processing of Class II associated invariant peptide both in vitro and in vivo.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2003

Characterization of the allosteric inhibition of a protein-protein interaction by mass spectrometry

Walter Davidson; Jerry L. Hopkins; Deborah D. Jeanfavre; Terence A. Kelly; Christine A. Grygon

The allosteric inhibition of the lymphocyte function associated antigen-1/intercellullar adhesion molecule (LFA-1/ICAM-1) interaction, by a class of small molecules, is characterized by a battery of mass spectrometric techniques. Binding of hydantoins to the I domain of LFA-1 is observed by size exclusion chromatography/mass spectrometry (SEC/MS) and by direct electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI/MS). A photoactive hydantoin analog specifically labels an amino acid residue of LFA-1 I domain. Competition with this photoaffinity labeling by a panel of inhibitors is correlated with their Kd’s for inhibition of the LFA-1/ICAM interaction. Alterations to the tertiary structure of LFA-1 I domain, upon compound binding, are inferred from perturbation in the ESI mass spectrum of the polypeptidés charge state distribution and by an altered level of nonspecific multimer formation. The results demonstrate specific, stoichiometric, reversible binding of the hydantoins to LFA-1. They further show correlation of this binding with activity and indicate alterations in the polypeptide’s tertiary structure, on hydantoin binding, consistent with the proposed mechanism for inhibition of the protein—protein interaction.


Journal of Biochemical and Biophysical Methods | 1993

Rapid, sensitive and efficient HPLC assays for HIV-1 proteinase

Rajashekhar Betageri; Jerry L. Hopkins; Diane Thibeault; Michel J. Emmanuel; Grace C. Chow; Mark T. Skoog; Piet de Dreu; Kenneth A. Cohen

The proteinase encoded by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) cleaves peptide substrates of sequences derived from processing sites in HIV-1 gag-pol polypeptide. Based on this cleavage, assays that utilize HPLC to measure activity of HIV-1 proteinase are reported herein. In the assay first described, a baseline separation of unlabeled substrate and products is achieved with a run time of 10 min and UV detection. Enzyme concentrations as low as 1 nM, which is the lowest reported for an assay employing underivatized peptide substrate, are attained. Even more powerful, versatile and sensitive, a second method that takes advantage of a peptide substrate labeled at its N-terminus with the fluorescein derivative is described as well. Because of the fluorescein label, this method offers several superior features, including very fast analysis of substrate and product in less than 3 min and fluorescence detection which provides essentially total freedom from interference. Synthesis of fluorescein-labeled peptide substrate is accomplished by solid-phase peptide synthesis.


Journal of Chromatography A | 1994

High-performance liquid chromatography and photoaffinity crosslinking to explore the binding environment of nevirapine to reverse transcriptase of human immunodeficiency virus type-1

Deborah E.H. Palladino; Jerry L. Hopkins; Richard H. Ingraham; Thomas C. Warren; Suresh R. Kapadia; Glenn J. Van Moffaert; Peter M. Grob; James M. Stevenson; Kenneth A. Cohen

Nevirapine (BI-RG-587) is a potent inhibitor of the polymerase activity of reverse transcriptase of human immunodeficiency virus type-1. Nevirapine, as well as several other non-nucleoside compounds of various structural classes, bind strongly at a site which includes tyrosines 181 and 188 of the p66 subunit of reverse transcriptase. The chromatography which was utilized to explore this binding site is described. BI-RH-448 and BI-RJ-70, two tritiated photoaffinity azido analogues of nevirapine, are each crosslinked to reverse transcriptase. The use of several HPLC-based techniques employing different modes of detection makes it possible to demonstrate a dramatic difference between the two azido analogues in crosslinking behavior. In particular, by comparing HPLC tryptic peptide maps of the photoadducts formed between reverse transcriptase and each azido analogue, it can be shown that crosslinking with BI-RJ-70 but not with BI-RH-448 is more localized, stable, and hence exploitable for the identification of the specifically bonded amino acid residue(s). In addition, comparison of the tryptic maps also makes it feasible to assess which rings of the nevirapine structure are proximal or distal to amino acid side chains of reverse transcriptase. Finally, another feature of the HPLC peptide maps is the application of on-line detection by second order derivative UV absorbance spectroscopy to identify the crosslinked amino acid residue.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2006

Development of a High-Throughput Assay to Measure Histidine Decarboxylase Activity

E. Michael August; Lori Patnaude; Jerry L. Hopkins; Joey M. Studts; Elda Gautschi; Anthony Shrutkowski; Anthony Kronkaitis; Martha Priscilla Brown; Alisa Kabcenell; Daniel Rajotte

Histamine is a well-known mediator of allergic, inflammatory, and neurological responses. More recent studies suggest a role for histamine and its receptors in a wide range of biological processes, including T-cell maturation and bone remodeling. Histamine serum levels are regulated mainly by the activity of the histamine-synthesizing enzyme histidine decarboxylase (HDC). Despite the importance of this enzyme in many physiological processes, very few potent HDC inhibitors have been identified. HDC assays suitable for high-throughput screening have not been reported. The authors describe the development of a fluorescence polarization assay to measure HDC enzymatic activity. They used a fluorescein-histamine probe that binds with high affinity to an antihistamine antibody for detection. Importantly, they show that probe binding is fully competed by histamine, but no competition by the HDC substrate histidine was observed. The automated assay was performed in a total volume of 60 μL, had an assay window of 80 to 100 mP, and had a Z′ factor of 0.6 to 0.7. This assay provides new tools to study HDC activity and pharmacological modulation of histamine levels.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2001

Binding Site Elucidation of Hydantoin-Based Antagonists of LFA-1 Using Multidisciplinary Technologies: Evidence for the Allosteric Inhibition of a Protein−Protein Interaction

Kathleen Last-Barney; Walter Davidson; Mario G. Cardozo; Leah L. Frye; Christine A. Grygon; Jerry L. Hopkins; Deborah D. Jeanfavre; Susan Pav; Chungeng Qian; James M. Stevenson; Liang Tong; Renee M. Zindell; Terence A. Kelly


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2002

Design and synthesis of dipeptide nitriles as reversible and potent Cathepsin S inhibitors

Yancey David Ward; David S. Thomson; Leah L. Frye; Charles L. Cywin; Tina Morwick; Michel J. Emmanuel; Renee M. Zindell; Daniel W. McNeil; Younes Bekkali; Marc Giradot; Matt Hrapchak; Molly Deturi; Kathy Crane; Della White; Susan Pav; Yong Wang; Ming-Hong Hao; Christine A. Grygon; Mark E. Labadia; Dorothy M. Freeman; Walter Davidson; Jerry L. Hopkins; Maryanne L. Brown; Denice M. Spero


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1999

Inhibition of Human Cytomegalovirus Protease by Monocyclic β-Lactam Derivatives: Kinetic Characterization Using a Fluorescent Probe

Pierre R. Bonneau; Firoz Hasani; Céline Plouffe; Eric Malenfant; Steve R. LaPlante; Ingrid Guse; William W. Ogilvie; Raymond Plante; Walter Davidson; Jerry L. Hopkins; Maurice M. Morelock; and Michael G. Cordingley; Robert Deziel


Biophysical Chemistry | 2007

Agonist versus antagonist induce distinct thermodynamic modes of co-factor binding to the glucocorticoid receptor.

Rachel R. Kroe; Martha A. Baker; Martha Priscilla Brown; Neil A. Farrow; Elda Gautschi; Jerry L. Hopkins; Roger R. LaFrance; Anthony Kronkaitis; Dorothy M. Freeman; David S. Thomson; Gerald Nabozny; Christine A. Grygon; Mark E. Labadia


Analytical Chemistry | 2004

Characterization of the binding site for inhibitors of the HPV11 E1-E2 protein interaction on the E2 transactivation domain by photoaffinity labeling and mass spectrometry

Walter Davidson; Graham A. McGibbon; Peter W. White; Christiane Yoakim; Jerry L. Hopkins; Ingrid Guse; David M. Hambly; Lee Frego; William W. Ogilvie; Pierre Lavallee; Jacques Archambault

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