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Dive into the research topics where Karl Aston is active.

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Featured researches published by Karl Aston.


Biochimie | 2013

Promoter scanning of the human COX-2 gene with 8-ring polyamides: unexpected weakening of polyamide-DNA binding and selectivity by replacing an internal N-Me-pyrrole with β-alanine.

James K. Bashkin; Karl Aston; Joseph Ramos; Kevin J. Koeller; Rupesh Nanjunda; Gaofei He; Cynthia M. Dupureur; W. David Wilson

Rules for polyamide-DNA recognition have proved invaluable for the design of sequence-selective DNA binding agents in cell-free systems. However, these rules are not fully transferrable to predicting activity in cells, tissues or animals, and additional refinements to our understanding of DNA recognition would help biomedical studies. Similar complexities are encountered when using internal β-alanines as polyamide building blocks in place of N-methylpyrrole; β-alanines were introduced in polyamide designs to maintain good hydrogen bonding registry with the target DNA, especially for long polyamides or those with several GC bp (P.B. Dervan, A.R. Urbach, Essays Contemp. Chem. (2001) 327-339). Thus, to clarify important subtleties of molecular recognition, we studied the effects of replacing a single pyrrole with β-alanine in 8-ring polyamides designed against the Ets-1 transcription factor. Replacement of a single internal N-methylpyrrole with β-alanine to generate a β/Im pairing in two 8-ring polyamides causes a decrease in DNA binding affinity by two orders of magnitude and decreases DNA binding selectivity, contrary to expectations based on the literature. Measurements were made by fluorescence spectroscopy, quantitative DNA footprinting and surface plasmon resonance, with these vastly different techniques showing excellent agreement. Furthermore, results were validated for a range of DNA substrates from small hairpins to long dsDNA sequences. Docking studies helped show that β-alanine does not make efficient hydrophobic contacts with the rest of the polyamide or nearby DNA, in contrast to pyrrole. These results help refine design principles and expectations for polyamide-DNA recognition.


Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

DNA Binding Polyamides and the Importance of DNA Recognition in their use as Gene-Specific and Antiviral Agents

Kevin J. Koeller; G. Davis Harris; Karl Aston; Gaofei He; Carlos H. Castañeda; Melissa A Thornton; Terri G. Edwards; Shuo Wang; Rupesh Nanjunda; W. David Wilson; Chris Fisher; James K. Bashkin

There is a long history for the bioorganic and biomedical use of N-methyl-pyrrole-derived polyamides (PAs) that are higher homologs of natural products such as distamycin A and netropsin. This work has been pursued by many groups, with the Dervan and Sugiyama groups responsible for many breakthroughs. We have studied PAs since about 1999, partly in industry and partly in academia. Early in this program, we reported methods to control cellular uptake of polyamides in cancer cell lines and other cells likely to have multidrug resistance efflux pumps induced. We went on to discover antiviral polyamides active against HPV31, where SAR showed that a minimum binding size of about 10 bp of DNA was necessary for activity. Subsequently we discovered polyamides active against two additional high-risk HPVs, HPV16 and 18, a subset of which showed broad spectrum activity against HPV16, 18 and 31. Aspects of our results presented here are incompatible with reported DNA recognition rules. For example, molecules with the same cognate DNA recognition properties varied from active to inactive against HPVs. We have since pursued the mechanism of action of antiviral polyamides, and polyamides in general, with collaborators at NanoVir, the University of Missouri-St. Louis, and Georgia State University. We describe dramatic consequences of β-alanine positioning even in relatively small, 8-ring polyamides; these results contrast sharply with prior reports. This paper was originally presented by JKB as a Keynote Lecture in the 2nd International Conference on Medicinal Chemistry and Computer Aided Drug Design Conference in Las Vegas, NV, October 2013.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2012

Fluorescence assay of polyamide-DNA interactions.

Cynthia M. Dupureur; James K. Bashkin; Karl Aston; Kevin J. Koeller; Kimberly R. Gaston; Gaofei He

Polyamides (PAs) are distamycin-type ligands of DNA that bind the minor groove and are capable of sequence selective recognition. This capability provides a viable route to their development as therapeutics. Presented here is a simple and convenient fluorescence assay for PA-DNA binding. PAs are titrated into a sample of a hairpin DNA featuring a TAMRA dye attached to an internal dU near the PA binding site. In a study of 6 PAs, PA binding leads to a steady reproducible decrease in fluorescence intensity that can be used to generate binding isotherms. The assay works equally well with both short (6- to 8-ring) and long (14-ring) PAs, and K(d) values ranging from approximately 1 nM to at least 140 nM were readily obtained using a simple monochromator or filter configuration. Competition assays provide a means to assessing possible dye interference, which can be negligible. The assay can also be used to determine PA extinction coefficients and to measure binding kinetics; thus, it is an accessible and versatile tool for the study of PA properties and PA-DNA interactions.


Chemical Communications | 2013

Different Thermodynamic Signatures for DNA Minor Groove Binding with Changes in Salt Concentration and Temperature

Shuo Wang; Arvind Kumar; Karl Aston; Binh Nguyen; James K. Bashkin; David W. Boykin; W. David Wilson

The effects of salt concentration and temperature on the thermodynamics of DNA minor groove binding have quite different signatures: binding enthalpy is salt concentration independent but temperature dependent. Conversely, binding free energy is salt dependent but essentially temperature independent through enthalpy-entropy compensation.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2001

Computer-aided design (CAD) of Mn(II) complexes: superoxide dismutase mimetics with catalytic activity exceeding the native enzyme.

Karl Aston; Nigam P. Rath; Arati Naik; Urszula Slomczynska; Otto F. Schall; Dennis Riley


Biochemistry | 2012

Correlation of local effects of DNA sequence and position of β-alanine inserts with polyamide-DNA complex binding affinities and kinetics.

Shuo Wang; Rupesh Nanjunda; Karl Aston; James K. Bashkin; W. David Wilson


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2014

Modulation of DNA-Polyamide Interaction by β-alanine Substitutions: A Study of Positional Effects on Binding Affinity, Kinetics and Thermodynamics

Shuo Wang; Karl Aston; Kevin J. Koeller; G. Davis Harris; Nigam P. Rath; James K. Bashkin; W. David Wilson


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2017

β-Alanine and N-terminal cationic substituents affect polyamide–DNA binding

Beibei Liu; Shuo Wang; Karl Aston; Kevin J. Koeller; Shahrzad Fanny Hakami Kermani; Carlos H. Castañeda; M. José Scuderi; Rensheng Luo; James K. Bashkin; W. David Wilson


Archive | 1996

Methods of diagnostic image analysis using bioconjugates of metal complexes of nitrogen-containing macrocyclic ligands

William L. Neumann; Dennis Riley; Randy H. Weiss; Susan L. Henke; Patrick Lennon; Karl Aston


Analytical Biochemistry | 2012

Corrigendum to “Fluorescence assay of polyamide–DNA interactions” [Anal. Biochem. 423 (2012) 178–183]

Cynthia M. Dupureur; James K. Bashkin; Karl Aston; Kevin J. Koeller; Kimberly R. Gaston; Gaofei He

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William L. Neumann

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville

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James K. Bashkin

University of Missouri–St. Louis

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Randy H. Weiss

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Kevin J. Koeller

University of Missouri–St. Louis

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Shuo Wang

Georgia State University

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