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Dive into the research topics where Johannes Cornelius Hermann is active.

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Featured researches published by Johannes Cornelius Hermann.


Nature | 2007

Structure-based activity prediction for an enzyme of unknown function

Johannes Cornelius Hermann; Ricardo Marti-Arbona; Alexander A. Fedorov; Elena V. Fedorov; Steven C. Almo; Brian K. Shoichet; Frank M. Raushel

With many genomes sequenced, a pressing challenge in biology is predicting the function of the proteins that the genes encode. When proteins are unrelated to others of known activity, bioinformatics inference for function becomes problematic. It would thus be useful to interrogate protein structures for function directly. Here, we predict the function of an enzyme of unknown activity, Tm0936 from Thermotoga maritima, by docking high-energy intermediate forms of thousands of candidate metabolites. The docking hit list was dominated by adenine analogues, which appeared to undergo C6-deamination. Four of these, including 5-methylthioadenosine and S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH), were tested as substrates, and three had substantial catalytic rate constants (105 M-1 s-1). The X-ray crystal structure of the complex between Tm0936 and the product resulting from the deamination of SAH, S-inosylhomocysteine, was determined, and it corresponded closely to the predicted structure. The deaminated products can be further metabolized by T. maritima in a previously uncharacterized SAH degradation pathway. Structure-based docking with high-energy forms of potential substrates may be a useful tool to annotate enzymes for function.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Metal impurities cause false positives in high-throughput screening campaigns.

Johannes Cornelius Hermann; Yingsi Chen; Charles Wartchow; John Menke; Lin Gao; Shelley K. Gleason; Nancy-Ellen Haynes; Nathan Robert Scott; Ann C. Petersen; Stephen Deems Gabriel; Binh Thanh Vu; Kelly M. George; Arjun Narayanan; Shirley Li; Hong Qian; Nanda Beatini; Linghao Niu; Qing-Fen Gan

Organic impurities in compound libraries are known to often cause false-positive signals in screening campaigns for new leads, but organic impurities do not fully account for all false-positive results. We discovered inorganic impurities in our screening library that can also cause positive signals for a variety of targets and/or readout systems, including biochemical and biosensor assays. We investigated in depth the example of zinc for a specific project and in retrospect in various HTS screens at Roche and propose a straightforward counter screen using the chelator TPEN to rule out inhibition caused by zinc.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2006

Molecular mechanisms of antibiotic resistance: QM/MM modelling of deacylation in a class A β-lactamase

Johannes Cornelius Hermann; Lars Ridder; Hans-Dieter Höltje; Adrian J. Mulholland

Modelling of the first step of the deacylation reaction of benzylpenicillin in the E. coli TEM1 beta-lactamase (with B3LYP/6-31G + (d)//AM1-CHARMM22 quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics methods) shows that a mechanism in which Glu166 acts as the base to deprotonate a conserved water molecule is both energetically and structurally consistent with experimental data; the results may assist the design of new antibiotics and beta-lactamase inhibitors.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Pyrrolopyrazines as selective spleen tyrosine kinase inhibitors.

Fernando Padilla; Niala Bhagirath; Shaoqing Chen; Eric Chiao; David Michael Goldstein; Johannes Cornelius Hermann; Jonathan Hsu; Joshua Kennedy-Smith; Andreas Kuglstatter; Cheng Liao; Wenjian Liu; Lee Edwin Lowrie; Kin Chun Luk; Stephen M. Lynch; John Menke; Linghao Niu; Timothy D. Owens; Counde O'yang; Aruna Railkar; Ryan Craig Schoenfeld; Michelle Slade; Sandra Steiner; Yun-Chou Tan; Armando G. Villaseñor; Ce Wang; Jutta Wanner; Wenwei Xie; Daigen Xu; Xiaohu Zhang; Mingyan Zhou

We describe the discovery of several pyrrolopyrazines as potent and selective Syk inhibitors and the efforts that eventually led to the desired improvements in physicochemical properties and human whole blood potencies. Ultimately, our mouse model revealed unexpected toxicity that precluded us from further advancing this series.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Rational design of highly selective spleen tyrosine kinase inhibitors.

Matthew C. Lucas; David Michael Goldstein; Johannes Cornelius Hermann; Andreas Kuglstatter; Wenjian Liu; Kin Chun Luk; Fernando Padilla; Michelle Slade; Armando G. Villaseñor; Jutta Wanner; Wenwei Xie; Xiaohu Zhang; Cheng Liao

A novel approach to design selective spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) inhibitors is described. Inhibition of spleen tyrosine kinase has attracted much attention as a mechanism for the treatment of autoimmune diseases such as asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, and SLE. Fostamatinib, a Syk inhibitor that successfully completed phase II clinical trials, also exhibits some undesirable side effects. More selective Syk inhibitors could offer safer, alternative treatments. Through a systematic evaluation of the kinome, we identified Pro455 and Asn457 in the Syk ATP binding site as a rare combination among sequence aligned kinases and hypothesized that optimizing the interaction between them and a Syk inhibitor molecule would impart high selectivity for Syk over other kinases. We report the structure-guided identification of three series of selective spleen tyrosine kinase inhibitors that support our hypothesis and offer useful guidance to other researchers in the field.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Using Ovality to Predict Nonmutagenic, Orally Efficacious Pyridazine Amides as Cell Specific Spleen Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors

Matthew C. Lucas; Niala Bhagirath; Eric Chiao; David Michael Goldstein; Johannes Cornelius Hermann; Pei-Yuan Hsu; Stephan Kirchner; Joshua Kennedy-Smith; Andreas Kuglstatter; Christine Lukacs; John Menke; Linghao Niu; Fernando Padilla; Ying Peng; Liudmila Polonchuk; Aruna Railkar; Michelle Slade; Michael Soth; Daigen Xu; Preeti Yadava; Calvin Yee; Mingyan Zhou; Cheng Liao

Inhibition of spleen tyrosine kinase has attracted much attention as a mechanism for the treatment of cancers and autoimmune diseases such as asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, and systemic lupus erythematous. We report the structure-guided optimization of pyridazine amide spleen tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Early representatives of this scaffold were highly potent and selective but mutagenic in an Ames assay. An approach that led to the successful identification of nonmutagenic examples, as well as further optimization to compounds with reduced cardiovascular liabilities is described. Select pharmacokinetic and in vivo efficacy data are presented.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Fragment-Based Drug Design of Novel Pyranopyridones as Cell Active and Orally Bioavailable Tankyrase Inhibitors

Javier de Vicente; Parcharee Tivitmahaisoon; Pamela Berry; David Robert Bolin; Daisy Carvajal; Wei He; Kuo-Sen Huang; Cheryl A. Janson; Lena Liang; Christine Lukacs; Ann C. Petersen; Hong Qian; Lin Yi; Yong Zhuang; Johannes Cornelius Hermann

Tankyrase activity has been linked to the regulation of intracellular axin levels, which have been shown to be crucial for the Wnt pathway. Deregulated Wnt signaling is important for the genesis of many diseases including cancer. We describe herein the discovery and development of a new series of tankyrase inhibitors. These pyranopyridones are highly active in various cell-based assays. A fragment/structure based optimization strategy led to a compound with good pharmacokinetic properties that is suitable for in vivo studies and further development.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2004

A Combined QM/MM Approach to Protein−Ligand Interactions: Polarization Effects of the HIV-1 Protease on Selected High Affinity Inhibitors

Christian Hensen; Johannes Cornelius Hermann; Kwangho Nam; Shuhua Ma; Jiali Gao; Hans-Dieter Höltje


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2006

Predicting substrates by docking high-energy intermediates to enzyme structures

Johannes Cornelius Hermann; Eman Ghanem; Yingchun Li; Frank M. Raushel; John J. Irwin; Brian K. Shoichet


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2006

Resolution of Chiral Phosphate, Phosphonate, and Phosphinate Esters by an Enantioselective Enzyme Library

Charity Nowlan; Yingchun Li; Johannes Cornelius Hermann; Timothy Evans; Joseph E. Carpenter; Eman Ghanem; Brian K. Shoichet; Frank M. Raushel

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