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Featured researches published by John Salon.


Pharmacological Reviews | 2011

The Significance of G Protein-Coupled Receptor Crystallography for Drug Discovery

John Salon; David T. Lodowski; Krzysztof Palczewski

Crucial as molecular sensors for many vital physiological processes, seven-transmembrane domain G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) comprise the largest family of proteins targeted by drug discovery. Together with structures of the prototypical GPCR rhodopsin, solved structures of other liganded GPCRs promise to provide insights into the structural basis of the superfamilys biochemical functions and assist in the development of new therapeutic modalities and drugs. One of the greatest technical and theoretical challenges to elucidating and exploiting structure-function relationships in these systems is the emerging concept of GPCR conformational flexibility and its cause-effect relationship for receptor-receptor and receptor-effector interactions. Such conformational changes can be subtle and triggered by relatively small binding energy effects, leading to full or partial efficacy in the activation or inactivation of the receptor system at large. Pharmacological dogma generally dictates that these changes manifest themselves through kinetic modulation of the receptors G protein partners. Atomic resolution information derived from increasingly available receptor structures provides an entrée to the understanding of these events and practically applying it to drug design. Supported by structure-activity relationship information arising from empirical screening, a unified structural model of GPCR activation/inactivation promises to both accelerate drug discovery in this field and improve our fundamental understanding of structure-based drug design in general. This review discusses fundamental problems that persist in drug design and GPCR structural determination.


Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2008

Evaluation of dynamic mass redistribution technology for pharmacological studies of recombinant and endogenously expressed g protein-coupled receptors.

Paul H. Lee; Alice Gao; Carlo van Staden; Jenny T. Ly; John Salon; Arron Xu; Ye Fang; Ron Verkleeren

The Epic cell assay technology (Corning Inc., Corning, NY) uses a resonant waveguide grating optical biosensor to measure cellular response to ligands manifested through dynamic mass redistribution (DMR) of cellular contents. The DMR measurement is a noninvasive, label-free assay that can be used to assess the pharmacological properties of compounds. In this study, a panel of 12 compounds was evaluated against two G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) targets in recombinant expressed cell lines using the Corning Epic system in 384-well microplates. The evaluation was performed in a double-blinded fashion such that the identity and properties of both the GPCR targets and compounds were unknown to the researchers at the time of the study. Analysis of the DMR response from cell stimulation was used to identify compounds that functioned as agonists or antagonists and to evaluate the associated efficacy and potency. DMR results were shown to have good agreement with data obtained from cyclic AMP and calcium flux assays for compounds evaluated. A further analysis was performed and successfully identified the signaling pathways that the two GPCRs activated. In addition, the DMR measurement was able to detect responses from an endogenous receptor in these cells. The Epic DMR technology provides a generic platform amenable to pharmacological evaluation of cellular responses to GPCR activation in a label-free live cell assay format.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2002

Discovery of potent and selective small molecule NPY Y5 receptor antagonists.

Imadul Islam; Dale Dhanoa; John Finn; Ping Du; Mary W. Walker; John Salon; Jack Zhang; Charles Gluchowski

The discovery of a new class of sulfonamide NPY Y5 receptor antagonists is described. Optimization of this series led to the identification of compounds with high affinity for the hY5 subtype and excellent selectivity over the other NPY receptor subtypes. The SAR for this series was examined and a model for understanding the ligand-receptor interactions was developed.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2006

G-protein-coupled receptor microarrays for multiplexed compound screening.

Yulong Hong; Brian L. Webb; Sadashiva Pai; Ann M. Ferrie; Jinlin Peng; Fang Lai; Joydeep Lahiri; Gloria Biddlecome; Brian Rasnow; Michael Johnson; Hosung Min; Ye Fang; John Salon

Conventional assay methods for discovering and profiling drug-target interactions are typically developed on a target-by-target basis and hence can be cumbersome to enable and orchestrate. Herein the authors report a solid-state ligand-binding assay that operates in a multiplexed mode to report compound activity against a micorarray-configured panel of G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) targets. The pharmacological fidelity of the system is high, and its miniaturized “plug-and-play” format provides improved efficiency both in terms of execution time and reagent consumption. Taken together, these features make the system ideally suited to explore the structure-activity relationship of compounds across a broad region of target class space.


Biochemistry | 2008

Heterologous Expression and Purification of the Serotonin Type 4 Receptor from Transgenic Mouse Retina

David Salom; Nan Wu; Wenyu Sun; Zhiqian Dong; Krzysztof Palczewski; Steven R. Jordan; John Salon

Recent breakthroughs in the solution of X-ray structures for G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) with diffusible ligands have employed extensively mutated or recombined receptor fusion proteins heterologously expressed in conventional in vitro cell-based systems. While these advances now show that crystallization of non-rhodopsin members of this superfamily can be accomplished, the use of radically modified proteins may limit the relevance of the derived structures for precision-guided drug design. To better enable the study of native GPCR structures, we report here efforts to engineer an in vivo expression system that harnesses the photoreceptor system of the retina to express heterologous GPCRs with native human sequences in a biochemically homogeneous and pharmacologically functional conformation. As an example, we show that the human 5HT4 receptor, when placed under the influence of the mouse opsin promoter and an opsin rod outer segment (ROS) targeting sequence, localized to ROS of transgenic mouse retina. The resulting receptor protein was uniformly glycosylated and pharmacologically intact as demonstrated by immunoblotting and radioligand binding assays. Upon solubilization, the retinal 5HT4 receptor retained the binding properties of its initial state in retinal membranes. With the engineered T7 monoclonal epitope sequence, the solubilized receptor was easily purified by one-step immunoaffinity chromatography and the purified receptor in detergent solution preserved its ligand binding properties. This expression method may prove generally useful for generating functional, high-quality GPCR protein.


Biochemistry | 2012

Post-Translational Modifications of the Serotonin Type 4 Receptor Heterologously Expressed in Mouse Rod Cells

David Salom; Benlian Wang; Zhiqian Dong; Wenyu Sun; Pius S. Padayatti; Steven R. Jordan; John Salon; Krzysztof Palczewski

G-protein-coupled serotonin receptor type 4 (5-HT(4)R) is a pharmacological target implicated in a variety of gastrointestinal and nervous system disorders. As for many other integral membrane proteins, structural and functional studies of this receptor could be facilitated by its heterologous overexpression in eukaryotic systems that can perform appropriate post-translational modifications (PTMs) on the protein. We previously reported the development of an expression system that employs rhodopsins biosynthetic machinery in rod cells of the retina to express heterologous G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) in a pharmacologically functional form. In this study, we analyzed the glycosylation, phosphorylation, and palmitoylation of 5-HT(4)R heterologously expressed in rod cells of transgenic mice. We found that the glycosylation pattern in 5-HT(4)R was more complex than in murine and bovine rhodopsin. Moreover, overexpression of this exogenous GPCR in rod cells also affected the glycosylation pattern of coexisting native rhodopsin. These results highlight not only the occurrence of heterogeneous PTMs on transgenic proteins but also the complications that non-native PTMs can cause in the structural and functional characterization of both endogenous and heterologous protein targets.


Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2009

Development of multiplexed microarray binding assays for high-throughput drug discovery.

Yulong Hong; Li Liu; Sadashiva Pai; James N. Graf; Hongwei Rao; Jeffrey G. Lynn; Carlo van Staden; Paul H. Lee; Fang Lai; John Salon

The ability to combine primary hit identification assays with target profiling would significantly streamline the current drug discovery process. Working towards this end, we report here the development of a microarray-based ligand binding assay that supports multiplexed analysis of G protein-coupled receptor systems in a 96-well microplate format that is compatible with the equipment and infrastructure typical of high-throughput screening laboratories. A prototype microarray was generated by pin-printing seven different receptors within the wells of a specially coated glass-bottom microplate and assaying with a cocktail of fluorescent ligands. Development of the multiplexed system included optimization of methods for depositing receptor membrane proteins and establishing a generic set of assay conditions that simultaneously satisfied the pharmacology requirements of all of the receptor systems included on the array. The multiplexed system is shown to produce valid pharmacological results as evidenced by its ability to report K(i) values for receptor-specific fluorescent ligands and rank ordered potencies for diagnostic displacing compounds comparable to values generated by conventional simplexed assays. Moreover, the results of a 40-compound mini-screen confirmed that the assay accurately identifies valid hits. The results suggest the assay may be immediately suitable for routine profiling tasks and demonstrate the potential of the format for high-throughput multiplexed drug discovery.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005

Functional GPCR Microarrays

Yulong Hong; Brian L. Webb; Hui Su; Eric J. Mozdy; Ye Fang; Qi Wu; Li Liu; Jonathan Beck; Ann M. Ferrie; Srikanth Raghavan; John C. Mauro; Alain Carre; Dirk Müeller; Fang Lai; Brian Rasnow; Michael K. Johnson; Hosung Min; John Salon; Joydeep Lahiri


Biochemistry | 2007

Heterologous Expression of the Adenosine A1 Receptor in Transgenic Mouse Retina

Ning Li; David Salom; Li Zhang; Timothy John Roy Harris; Juan A. Ballesteros; O Marcin Golczak; Beata Jastrzebska; Krzysztof Palczewski; Carole Kurahara; Todd Juan; Steven R. Jordan; John Salon


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2006

Solid-phase synthesis and structure-activity relationships of novel biarylethers as melanin-concentrating hormone receptor-1 antagonists

Vu Van Ma; Anthony W. Bannon; Jamie Baumgartner; Clarence Hale; Faye Hsieh; Christopher Hulme; Kirk Rorrer; John Salon; Carlo van Staden; Paul Tempest

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Krzysztof Palczewski

Case Western Reserve University

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Brian Rasnow

California Institute of Technology

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David Salom

Case Western Reserve University

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