Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ji-Hu Zhang is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ji-Hu Zhang.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Identification of Orally Available Naphthyridine Protein Kinase D Inhibitors

Erik Meredith; Ophelia Ardayfio; Kimberly Beattie; Markus Dobler; Istvan J. Enyedy; Christoph Gaul; Vinayak Hosagrahara; Charles Jewell; Keith A. Koch; Wendy Lee; Hansjoerg Lehmann; Timothy A. McKinsey; Karl Miranda; Nikos Pagratis; Margaret R. Pancost; Anup Patnaik; Dillon Phan; Craig F. Plato; Ming Qian; Vasumathy Rajaraman; Chang Rao; Olga Rozhitskaya; Thomas Ruppen; Jie Shi; Sarah Siska; Clayton Springer; Maurice J. van Eis; Richard B. Vega; Anette Von Matt; Lihua Yang

A novel 2,6-naphthyridine was identified by high throughput screen (HTS) as a dual protein kinase C/D (PKC/PKD) inhibitor. PKD inhibition in the heart was proposed as a potential antihypertrophic mechanism with application as a heart failure therapy. As PKC was previously identified as the immediate upstream activator of PKD, PKD vs PKC selectivity was essential to understand the effect of PKD inhibition in models of cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. The present study describes the modification of the HTS hit to a series of prototype pan-PKD inhibitors with routine 1000-fold PKD vs PKC selectivity. Example compounds inhibited PKD activity in vitro, in cells, and in vivo following oral administration. Their effects on heart morphology and function are discussed herein.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2005

Further Comparison of Primary Hit Identification by Different Assay Technologies and Effects of Assay Measurement Variability

Xiang Wu; Matthew A. Sills; Ji-Hu Zhang

High-throughput screening (HTS) has grown rapidly in the past decade, with many advances in new assay formats, detection technologies, and laboratory automation. Recently, several studies have shown that the choice of assay technology used for the screening process is particularly important and can yield quite different primary screening outcomes. However, because the screening assays in these previous studies were performed in a single-point determination, it is not clear to what extent the difference observed in the screening results between different assay technologies is attributable to inherent assay variability and day-to-day measurement variation. To address this question, a nuclear receptor coactivator recruitment assay was carried out in 2 different assay formats, namely, AlphaScreen™ and time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer, which probed the same biochemical binding events but with different detection technologies. For each assay format, 4 independent screening runs in a typical HTS setting were completed to evaluate the run-to-run screening variability. These multiple tests with 2 assay formats allow an unambiguous comparison between the discrepancies of different assay formats and the effects of the variability of assay and screening measurements on the screening outcomes. The results provide further support that the choice of assay format or technology is a critical factor in HTS assay development.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2005

Probing the Primary Screening Efficiency by Multiple Replicate Testing: A Quantitative Analysis of Hit Confirmation and False Screening Results of a Biochemical Assay

Ji-Hu Zhang; Xiang Wu; Matthew A. Sills

Despite a large body of references on assay development, assay optimization, strategies, and methodologies for high-throughput screening (HTS), there have been few reports on investigations of the efficiency of primary screening in a systematic and quantitative manner for a typical HTS process. Recently, the authors investigated the primary hit comparison and the effect of measurement variability by screening a library of approximately 25,000 random compounds in multiple replicate tests in a nuclear receptor recruitment assay with 2 different assay detection technologies. In this report, we utilized these sets of multiple replicate screening data from a different perspective and conducted a systematic data analysis in order to gain some insights into the hit-finding efficiency of a typical primary screening process. Specifically, hit confirmation, false-positive (declaration) rates, and false-negative rates at different hit cutoff limits were explored and calculated from the 2 different assay formats. Results and analyses provided some quantitative estimation regarding the reliability and efficiency of the primary screening process. For the 2 assay formats tested in this report, the confirmation rate (activity repeated at or above a certain hit limit) was found to be 65% or above. It was also suggested that, at least in this case, applying some hit-selection strategies, it is possible to decrease the number of false-negative or false-positive hits without significantly increasing the efforts in primary screening.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Discovery and Molecular Basis of a Diverse Set of Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 Inhibitors Recognition by EED

Ling Li; Hailong Zhang; Man Zhang; Mengxi Zhao; Lijian Feng; Xiao Luo; Zhenting Gao; Ying Huang; Ophelia Ardayfio; Ji-Hu Zhang; Ying Lin; Hong Fan; Yuan Mi; Guobin Li; Lei Liu; Leying Feng; Fangjun Luo; Lin Teng; Wei Qi; Johannes Ottl; Andreas Lingel; Dirksen E. Bussiere; Zhengtian Yu; Peter Atadja; Chris Lu; En Li; Justin Gu; Kehao Zhao

Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2), a histone H3 lysine 27 methyltransferase, plays a key role in gene regulation and is a known epigenetics drug target for cancer therapy. The WD40 domain-containing protein EED is the regulatory subunit of PRC2. It binds to the tri-methylated lysine 27 of the histone H3 (H3K27me3), and through which stimulates the activity of PRC2 allosterically. Recently, we disclosed a novel PRC2 inhibitor EED226 which binds to the K27me3-pocket on EED and showed strong antitumor activity in xenograft mice model. Here, we further report the identification and validation of four other EED binders along with EED162, the parental compound of EED226. The crystal structures for all these five compounds in complex with EED revealed a common deep pocket induced by the binding of this diverse set of compounds. This pocket was created after significant conformational rearrangement of the aromatic cage residues (Y365, Y148 and F97) in the H3K27me3 binding pocket of EED, the width of which was delineated by the side chains of these rearranged residues. In addition, all five compounds interact with the Arg367 at the bottom of the pocket. Each compound also displays unique features in its interaction with EED, suggesting the dynamics of the H3K27me3 pocket in accommodating the binding of different compounds. Our results provide structural insights for rational design of novel EED binder for the inhibition of PRC2 complex activity.


Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2012

A Sensitive, Homogeneous, and High-Throughput Assay for Lysine-Specific Histone Demethylases at the H3K4 Site

Chunhua Wang; Mireille Caron; Debra Burdick; Zhaobin Kang; Douglas S. Auld; William Adam Hill; Jaime Padrós; Ji-Hu Zhang

Histone methylation is a regulated feature of nucleosomes that can have an impact on gene expression. The methylation state of histone residues has also been found in recent years to be associated with various disorders. Tools for detecting methylation state changes are very useful for dissecting the function of these epigenetic marks. In this work, a sensitive homogeneous assay for histone demethylase activity at the H3K4 site has been developed in a time-resolved fluorescent resonance energy transfer assay format. The assay is based on the detection of the unmethylated H3 peptide by a fluorescent europium-chelate labeled monoclonal antibody binding specifically to the H3K4 site. The assay was validated for histone lysine-specific demethylase 1 and was demonstrated to be a suitable assay for inhibitor profiling and high-throughput screening.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2010

Assay Development and Screening of Human DGAT1 Inhibitors with an LC/MS-Based Assay: Application of Mass Spectrometry for Large-Scale Primary Screening

Ji-Hu Zhang; Thomas P. Roddy; Pei-i Ho; Christopher Horvath; Chad Vickers; Steven Stout; Brian K. Hubbard; Y. Karen Wang; W. Adam Hill; Dejan Bojanic

Many attractive targets for therapeutic intervention are enzymes that catalyze biological reactions involving small molecules such as lipids, fatty acids, amino acid derivatives, nucleic acid derivatives, and cofactors. Some of the reactions are difficult to detect by methods commonly used in high-throughput screening (HTS) without specific radioactive or fluorescent labeling of substrates. In addition, there are instances when labeling has a detrimental effect on the biological response. Generally, applicable assay methodologies for detection of such reactions are thus required. Mass spectrometry (MS), being a label-free detection tool, has been actively pursued for assay detection in HTS in the past several years. The authors have explored the use of multiparallel liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) for high-throughput detection of biochemical reactions. In this report, we describe in detail the assay development and screening with a LC/MS-based system for inhibitors of human diacylglycerol acyltransferase (DGAT1) with a chemical library of approximately 800,000 compounds. Several strategies and process improvements have been investigated to overcome technical challenges such as data variation and throughput. Results indicated that, through these innovative approaches, the LC/MS-based screening method is both feasible and suitable for high-throughput primary screening.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2014

Application of Titration-Based Screening for the Rapid Pilot Testing of High-Throughput Assays

Ji-Hu Zhang; Zhao B. Kang; Ophelia Ardayfio; Pei-i Ho; Tom Smith; Iain M. Wallace; Scott Bowes; W. Adam Hill; Douglas S. Auld

Pilot testing of an assay intended for high-throughput screening (HTS) with small compound sets is a necessary but often time-consuming step in the validation of an assay protocol. When the initial testing concentration is less than optimal, this can involve iterative testing at different concentrations to further evaluate the pilot outcome, which can be even more time-consuming. Quantitative HTS (qHTS) enables flexible and rapid collection of assay performance statistics, hits at different concentrations, and concentration-response curves in a single experiment. Here we describe the qHTS process for pilot testing in which eight-point concentration-response curves are produced using an interplate asymmetric dilution protocol in which the first four concentrations are used to represent the range of typical HTS screening concentrations and the last four concentrations are added for robust curve fitting to determine potency/efficacy values. We also describe how these data can be analyzed to predict the frequency of false-positives, false-negatives, hit rates, and confirmation rates for the HTS process as a function of screening concentration. By taking into account the compound pharmacology, this pilot-testing paradigm enables rapid assessment of the assay performance and choosing the optimal concentration for the large-scale HTS in one experiment.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2016

Matrix-Based Activity Pattern Classification as a Novel Method for the Characterization of Enzyme Inhibitors Derived from High-Throughput Screening.

Douglas S. Auld; Marta Jimenez; Kimberley Yue; Scott A. Busby; Yu-Chi Chen; Scott Bowes; Greg Wendel; Tom Smith; Ji-Hu Zhang

One of the central questions in the characterization of enzyme inhibitors is determining the mode of inhibition (MOI). Classically, this is done with a number of low-throughput methods in which inhibition models are fitted to the data. The ability to rapidly characterize the MOI for inhibitors arising from high-throughput screening in which hundreds to thousands of primary inhibitors may need to be characterized would greatly help in lead selection efforts. Here we describe a novel method for determining the MOI of a compound without the need for curve fitting of the enzyme inhibition data. We provide experimental data to demonstrate the utility of this new high-throughput MOI classification method based on nonparametric analysis of the activity derived from a small matrix of substrate and inhibitor concentrations (e.g., from a 4S × 4I matrix). Lists of inhibitors from four different enzyme assays are studied, and the results are compared with the previously described IC50-shift method for MOI classification. The MOI results from this method are in good agreement with the known MOI and compare favorably with those from the IC50-shift method. In addition, we discuss some advantages and limitations of the method and provide recommendations for utilization of this MOI classification method.


British Journal of Radiology | 2015

Pattern of lymph node metastases and its implication in radiotherapeutic clinical target volume in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer: a study of 2062 cases

Y-X J Wang; B-sh Li; W Huang; Y Yi; Ji-Hu Zhang; Zh-t Wang; H-f Sun; H-sh Li; Y-m Wei

OBJECTIVE To study the pattern of lymph node metastasis (LNM) of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and to clarify which node level should be included while undergoing radiotherapy (RT). METHODS A total of 2062 patients with NSCLC patients who had undergone thoracotomy were retrospectively examined. The clinicopathological factors related to LNM were analysed. RESULTS The LNM rates (the number of node-positive patients/the total number of patients) in patients with primary tumours in different lobes (left upper lobe, left lower lobe, right upper lobe, right middle lobe and right lower lobe) were 53.25%, 53.87%, 53.77%, 64.67% and 61.58%, respectively. We have found that in all of the clinicopathological factors, including sex, age, tumour location, histological type, maximum diameter, T stage, degree of differentiation and tumour growth pattern, only maximum diameter (p = 0.336) and histological type (p = 0.360) did not have significant correlation with LNM rate. All of the above factors except tumour growth pattern (p = 0.239) and maximum diameter (p = 0.613) were significantly associated with lymph node ratio [LNR, ratio between metastatic and examined lymph nodes (LNs)] in linear regression. CONCLUSION For patients with NSCLC, LNM rate and LNR can be recommended as applicable parameters for LN involvement. Multiple clinicopathological factors should be considered comprehensively to design the clinical target volume for RT of NSCLC. ADVANCES IN KNOWLEDGE This article can provide evidence to radio-oncologists how to choose range of lymph nodal clinical target volume when they are treating inoperable patients with NSCLC patients by analysing data of patients after surgery.


Archive | 2009

Chapter 8:Advances in Biological Screening for Lead Discovery

Christian N. Parker; Johannes Ottl; Daniela Gabriel; Ji-Hu Zhang

High throughput screening (HTS) has become one of the main methods for generating leads for drug discovery.1 The capacity and throughput of screening have been growing steadily for the last two decades. HTS has transformed biological testing from a process using test tube and cuvette measurements to...

Collaboration


Dive into the Ji-Hu Zhang's collaboration.

Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge