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Dive into the research topics where Keith B. Pfister is active.

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Featured researches published by Keith B. Pfister.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Azaindoles as Zinc-Binding Small-Molecule Inhibitors of the JAMM Protease CSN5.

Eva Altmann; Paul Erbel; Martin Renatus; Michael Schaefer; Anita Schlierf; Adelaide Druet; Laurence Kieffer; Mickael Sorge; Keith B. Pfister; Ulrich Hassiepen; Matthew Jones; Simon Ruedisser; Daniela Ostermeier; Bruno Martoglio; Anne B. Jefferson; Jean Quancard

CSN5 is the zinc metalloprotease subunit of the COP9 signalosome (CSN), which is an important regulator of cullin-RING E3 ubiquitin ligases (CRLs). CSN5 is responsible for the cleavage of NEDD8 from CRLs, and blocking deconjugation of NEDD8 traps the CRLs in a hyperactive state, thereby leading to auto-ubiquitination and ultimately degradation of the substrate recognition subunits. Herein, we describe the discovery of azaindoles as a new class of CSN5 inhibitors, which interact with the active-site zinc ion of CSN5 through an unprecedented binding mode. The best compounds inhibited CSN5 with nanomolar potency, led to degradation of the substrate recognition subunit Skp2 in cells, and reduced the viability of HCT116 cells.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2014

Abstract B38: Inhibiting mutated KRAS, a broken switch of effector pathways

Johanna M. Jansen; Wolfgang Jahnke; Susan Fong; Laura Tandeske; Charles Wartchow; Keith B. Pfister; Tatiana Zavorotinskaya; Anke Blechschmidt; Dirksen E. Bussiere; Yumin Dai; Jeff Dove; Eric Fang; David Farley; Jean-Michel Florent; John Fuller; Simona Gokhin; Alvar D. Gossert; Mohammad Hekmat-Nejad; Chrystèle Henry; Julia Klopp; Bill Lenahan; Andreas Lingel; Arndt Meyer; Jamie Narberes; Gwynn Pardee; C. Gregory Paris; Savithri Ramurthy; Paul A. Renhowe; Sebastien Rieffel; Kevin Shoemaker

Mutated forms of KRAS are no longer able to switch effectors between “on” and “off” states. It is known that the function of KRAS is controlled by key parts in the C-terminus, including six consecutive lysines, a terminal prenyl moiety and a terminal carboxymethyl functional group. We set out to discover compounds which would inhibit the function of mutated KRAS as an activator for effectors. This campaign yielded several compounds that blocked biochemical and cellular functions of KRAS with low micromolar activity while not affecting markers outside of KRAS pathways in cells. In order to understand the mode of binding of these compounds to KRAS, we generated different forms of the protein, including unprenylated truncated and fully processed full-length protein. NMR studies with truncated protein (amino acids 1-169) identified a site at which compound binding stabilized the inactive conformation of KRAS. This site is located adjacent to switch-II and is similar to sites described by others. The Kd determined for this binding event is almost 3 orders of magnitude higher than the IC50 and EC50 values measured in biochemical and cellular assays. In order to understand this difference, we developed a biophysical assay using the Fortebio system which enabled binding studies in a system with full-length prenylated protein in the presence of lipids, to match the context of the biochemical and cellular assays. Micromolar binding to the full-length prenylated KRAS protein was observed in the Fortebio assay and binding was not observed in the absence of prenylation, consistent with the near millimolar Kd observed by NMR for truncated KRAS. Curiously, similar micromolar binding was seen to a peptide derived from the C-terminus of KRAS (amino acids 168-185) with and without prenyl modification while related compounds that do not bind to the full-length prenylated KRAS also do not bind to these peptides. It is still unclear whether binding to the terminal peptide in lipid context is related to the binding site adjacent to switch-II. From a drug discovery perspective, it remains to be confirmed whether current inhibitors can be optimized. Citation Format: Johanna Jansen, Wolfgang Jahnke, Susan Fong, Laura Tandeske, Charles Wartchow, Keith Pfister, Tatiana Zavorotinskaya, Anke Blechschmidt, Dirksen Bussiere, Yumin Dai, Jeff Dove, Eric Fang, David Farley, Jean-Michel Florent, John Fuller, Simona Gokhin, Alvar Gossert, Mohammad Hekmat-Nejad, Chrystele Henry, Julia Klopp, Bill Lenahan, Andreas Lingel, Arndt Meyer, Jamie Narberes, Gwynn Pardee, C Gregory Paris, Savithri Ramurthy, Paul Renhowe, Sebastien Rieffel, Kevin Shoemaker, Sharadha Subramanian, Tiffany Tsang, Stephania Widger, Armin Widmer, Isabel Zaror, Stephen Hardy. Inhibiting mutated KRAS, a broken switch of effector pathways. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference on RAS Oncogenes: From Biology to Therapy; Feb 24-27, 2014; Lake Buena Vista, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Mol Cancer Res 2014;12(12 Suppl):Abstract nr B38. doi: 10.1158/1557-3125.RASONC14-B38


Archive | 2007

Pyrimidine derivatives used as PI-3-kinase inhibitors

Matthew Burger; Zhi-Jie Ni; Sabina Pecchi; Gordana Atallah; Sarah Bartulis; Kelly Frazier; Aaron Smith; Joelle Verhagen; Yanchen Zhang; Allan S. Wagman; Simon Ng; Keith B. Pfister; Daniel J. Poon; Alicia Louie; Teresa E. Pick; Paul A. Barsanti; Edwin Iwanowicz; Wendy J. Fantl; Thomas Hendrickson; Mark Knapp; Hanne Meritt; Charles Voliva; Marion Wiesmann; Xiahua Xin


Archive | 2007

Quinazolines for pdk1 inhibition

Savithri Ramurthy; Xiaodong Lin; Sharadha Subramanian; Alice Rico; Xiaojing M. Wang; Rama Jain; Jeremy Murray; Steven E. Basham; Robert Warne; Wei Shu; Yasheen Zhou; Jeffrey H. Dove; Mina E. Aikawa; Payman Amiri; Weibo Wang; Johanna M. Jansen; Allan S. Wagman; Keith B. Pfister; Simon Ng


Archive | 2014

3-pyrimidin-4-yl-oxazolidin-2-ones as inhibitors of mutant idh

Thomas Caferro; Young Shin Cho; Abran Costales; Huangshu Lei; Francois Lenoir; Julian Levell; Gang Liu; Mark G. Palermo; Keith B. Pfister; Martin Sendzik; Cynthia Shafer; Michael Shultz; Troy Smith; James Sutton; Bakary-Barry Toure; Fan Yang; Qian Zhao


Archive | 2010

Pyridine and pyrazine derivatives as protein kinase modulators

Paul A. Barsanti; Cheng Hu; Jeff Jin; Robert Keyes; Robert Kucejko; Xiaodong Lin; Yue Pan; Keith B. Pfister; Martin Sendzik; James Sutton; Lifeng Wan


Archive | 2011

3-(AMINOARYL)-PYRIDINE COMPOUNDS

William R. Antonios-McCrea; Paul A. Barsanti; Cheng Hu; Xianming Jin; Eric J. Martin; Yue Pan; Keith B. Pfister; Martin Sendzik; James Sutton; Lifeng Wan


Archive | 2013

Heteroaryl Compounds and Their Uses

Paul A. Barsanti; Cheng Hu; Jeff Jin; Robert Keyes; Robert Kucejko; Xiaodong Lin; Yue Pan; Keith B. Pfister; Martin Sendzik; James Sutton; Lifeng Wan


Archive | 2012

Substituted bi-heteroaryl compounds as cdk9 inhibitors and their uses

William R. Antonios-McCrea; Paul A. Barsanti; Cheng Hu; Xianming Jin; Eric J. Martin; Yue Pan; Xiaodong Lin; Keith B. Pfister; Paul A. Renhowe; Martin Sendzik; James Sutton; Lifeng Wan


Archive | 2008

CSF-1R inhibitors, compositions, and methods of use

Keith B. Pfister; Allan S. Wagman; Simon Ng; Martin Sendzik; James Sutton; Marion Wiesmann

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