Kenneth Huang
Georgia State University
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Featured researches published by Kenneth Huang.
Science Advances | 2016
Chen Zhang; Tuo Zhang; Juan Zou; Cassandra Lynn Miller; Rakshya Gorkhali; Jeong Yeh Yang; Anthony L. Schilmiller; Shuo Wang; Kenneth Huang; Edward M. Brown; Kelley W. Moremen; Jian Hu; Jenny J. Yang
Structural and functional characterization of the extracellular domain of the human CaSR with bound Mg2+ and a tryptophan derivative. Ca2+-sensing receptors (CaSRs) modulate calcium and magnesium homeostasis and many (patho)physiological processes by responding to extracellular stimuli, including divalent cations and amino acids. We report the first crystal structure of the extracellular domain (ECD) of human CaSR bound with Mg2+ and a tryptophan derivative ligand at 2.1 Å. The structure reveals key determinants for cooperative activation by metal ions and aromatic amino acids. The unexpected tryptophan derivative was bound in the hinge region between two globular ECD subdomains, and represents a novel high-affinity co-agonist of CaSR. The dissection of structure-function relations by mutagenesis, biochemical, and functional studies provides insights into the molecular basis of human diseases arising from CaSR mutations. The data also provide a novel paradigm for understanding the mechanism of CaSR-mediated signaling that is likely shared by the other family C GPCR [G protein (heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide–binding protein)–coupled receptor] members and can facilitate the development of novel CaSR-based therapeutics.
Angewandte Chemie | 2015
Liuqing Wen; Kenneth Huang; Mohui Wei; Jeffrey Meisner; Yunpeng Liu; Kristina Garner; Lanlan Zang; Xuan Wang; Xu Li; Junqiang Fang; Hou-Cheng Zhang; Peng George Wang
Studies of rare ketoses have been hampered by a lack of efficient preparation methods. A convenient, efficient, and cost-effective platform for the facile synthesis of ketoses is described. This method enables the preparation of difficult-to-access ketopentoses and ketohexoses from common and inexpensive starting materials with high yield and purity and without the need for a tedious isomer separation step.
Frontiers in Physiology | 2016
Chen Zhang; Cassandra Lynn Miller; Rakshya Gorkhali; Juan Zou; Kenneth Huang; Edward M. Brown; Jenny J. Yang
Ca2+-sensing receptors (CaSRs) play a central role in regulating extracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]o) homeostasis and many (patho)physiological processes in multiple organs. This regulation is orchestrated by a cooperative response to extracellular stimuli such as small changes in Ca2+, Mg2+, amino acids, and other ligands. In addition, CaSR is a pleiotropic receptor regulating several intracellular signaling pathways, including calcium mobilization and intracellular calcium oscillation. Nearly 200 mutations and polymorphisms have been found in CaSR in relation to a variety of human disorders associated with abnormal Ca2+ homeostasis. In this review, we summarize efforts directed at identifying binding sites for calcium and amino acids. Both homotropic cooperativity among multiple calcium binding sites and heterotropic cooperativity between calcium and amino acid were revealed using computational modeling, predictions, and site-directed mutagenesis coupled with functional assays. The hinge region of the bilobed Venus flytrap (VFT) domain of CaSR plays a pivotal role in coordinating multiple extracellular stimuli, leading to cooperative responses from the receptor. We further highlight the extensive number of disease-associated mutations that have also been shown to affect CaSRs cooperative action via several types of mechanisms. These results provide insights into the molecular bases of the structure and functional cooperativity of this receptor and other members of family C of the G protein-coupled receptors (cGPCRs) in health and disease states, and may assist in the prospective development of novel receptor-based therapeutics.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017
Iléana Antony-Debré; Ananya Paul; Joana Leite; Kelly Mitchell; Hye Mi Kim; Luis Carvajal; Tihomira I. Todorova; Kenneth Huang; Arvind Kumar; Abdelbasset A. Farahat; Boris Bartholdy; Swathi Rao Narayanagari; Jiahao Chen; Alberto Ambesi-Impiombato; Adolfo A. Ferrando; Ioannis Mantzaris; Evripidis Gavathiotis; Amit Verma; Britta Will; David W. Boykin; W. David Wilson; Gregory M.K. Poon; Ulrich Steidl
The transcription factor PU.1 is often impaired in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Here, we used AML cells that already had low PU.1 levels and further inhibited PU.1 using either RNA interference or, to our knowledge, first-in-class small-molecule inhibitors of PU.1 that we developed specifically to allosterically interfere with PU.1-chromatin binding through interaction with the DNA minor groove that flanks PU.1-binding motifs. These small molecules of the heterocyclic diamidine family disrupted the interaction of PU.1 with target gene promoters and led to downregulation of canonical PU.1 transcriptional targets. shRNA or small-molecule inhibition of PU.1 in AML cells from either PU.1lo mutant mice or human patients with AML-inhibited cell growth and clonogenicity and induced apoptosis. In murine and human AML (xeno)transplantation models, treatment with our PU.1 inhibitors decreased tumor burden and resulted in increased survival. Thus, our study provides proof of concept that PU.1 inhibition has potential as a therapeutic strategy for the treatment of AML and for the development of small-molecule inhibitors of PU.1.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016
Liuqing Wen; Yuan Zheng; Kuan Jiang; Mingzhen Zhang; Shukkoor Muhammed Kondengaden; Shanshan Li; Kenneth Huang; Jing Li; Jing Song; Peng George Wang
Sialic acids are typically linked α(2-3) or α(2-6) to the galactose that located at the non-reducing terminal end of glycans, playing important but distinct roles in a variety of biological and pathological processes. However, details about their respective roles are still largely unknown due to the lack of an effective analytical technique. Herein, a two-step chemoenzymatic approach for the rapid and sensitive detection of N-acetylneuraminic acid-α(2-3)-galactose glycans is described.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2017
Suela Xhani; Shingo Esaki; Kenneth Huang; Noa Erlitzki; Gregory M.K. Poon
The ETS family of transcription factors is a functionally heterogeneous group of gene regulators that share a structurally conserved, eponymous DNA-binding domain. Unlike other ETS homologues, such as Ets-1, DNA recognition by PU.1 is highly sensitive to its osmotic environment due to excess interfacial hydration in the complex. To investigate interfacial hydration in the two homologues, we mutated a conserved tyrosine residue, which is exclusively engaged in coordinating a well-defined water contact between the protein and DNA among ETS proteins, to phenylalanine. The loss of this water-mediated contact blunted the osmotic sensitivity of PU.1/DNA binding, but did not alter binding under normo-osmotic conditions, suggesting that PU.1 has evolved to maximize osmotic sensitivity. The homologous mutation in Ets-1, which was minimally sensitive to osmotic stress due to a sparsely hydrated interface, reduced DNA-binding affinity at normal osmolality but the complex became stabilized by osmotic stress. Molecular dynamics simulations of wildtype and mutant PU.1 and Ets-1 in their free and DNA-bound states, which recapitulated experimental features of the proteins, showed that abrogation of this tyrosine-mediated water contact perturbed the Ets-1/DNA complex not through disruption of interfacial hydration, but by inhibiting local dynamics induced specifically in the bound state. Thus, a configurationally identical water-mediated contact plays mechanistically distinct roles in mediating DNA recognition by structurally homologous ETS transcription factors.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016
Liuqing Wen; Lanlan Zang; Kenneth Huang; Shanshan Li; Run-Ling Wang; Peng George Wang
L-Rhamnulose (6-deoxy-L-arabino-2-hexulose) and L-fuculose (6-deoxy-L-lyxo-2-hexulose) were prepared from L-rhamnose and L-fucose by a two-step strategy. In the first reaction step, isomerization of L-rhamnose to L-rhamnulose, or L-fucose to L-fuculose was combined with a targeted phosphorylation reaction catalyzed by L-rhamnulose kinase (RhaB). The by-products (ATP and ADP) were selectively removed by silver nitrate precipitation method. In the second step, the phosphate group was hydrolyzed to produce L-rhamnulose or L-fuculose with purity exceeding 99% in more than 80% yield (gram scale).
European Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2016
Yunpeng Liu; Liuqing Wen; Lei Li; Madhusudhan Reddy Gadi; Wanyi Guan; Kenneth Huang; Zhongying Xiao; Mohui Wei; Cheng Ma; Qing Zhang; Hai Yu; Xi Chen; Peng George Wang; Junqiang Fang
A concise, prototypical, and stereoselective strategy for the synthesis of therapeutically and immunologically significant glycosphingolipids has been developed. This strategy provides a universal platform for glycosphingolipid synthesis by block coupling of enzymatically prepared free oligosaccharideglycans to lipids using glycosyl N-phenyltrifluoroacetimidates as efficient activated intermediates. As demonstrated here, two different types of glycosphingolipids were obtained in excellent yields using the method.
Epigenetic Technological Applications | 2015
Keqin Kathy Li; Kenneth Huang; Shukkoor Muhammed Kondengaden; Jonathan Wooten; Hamed Reyhanfard; Zhang Qing; Bingxue Chris Zhai; Peng George Wang
Epigenetics is the study of heritable changes in gene expression without alterations in the underlying DNA sequence. Efforts have been made to understand aspects of epigenetic regulation in normal and cancer cells. With the recent discoveries of key histone methyltransferases, it is an exciting time for the field of epigenetics, particularly for enzymes that have been shown to be the writers of epigenetic markers on genes coding for proteins in cancer. Thus, the development of highly potent and specific small-molecule inhibitors to cancer-related histone methyltransferases shows great promise as a therapeutic option. In this review, we focus on the cancer-related histone methyltransferases, including lysine methyltransferases such as DOT1L, EZH2, G9a, and MLL, as well as arginine methyltransferases. We summarize the enzyme characters, their relations to different cancers, and the drug discoveries targeted to these key enzymes.
Biophysical Chemistry | 2017
Noa Erlitzki; Kenneth Huang; Suela Xhani; Abdelbasset A. Farahat; Arvind Kumar; David W. Boykin; Gregory M.K. Poon
Previous investigations of sequence-specific DNA binding by model minor groove-binding compounds showed that the ligand/DNA complex was destabilized in the presence of compatible co-solutes. Inhibition was interpreted in terms of osmotic stress theory as the uptake of significant numbers of excess water molecules from bulk solvent upon complex formation. Here, we interrogated the AT-specific DNA complex formed with the symmetric heterocyclic diamidine DB1976 as a model for minor groove DNA recognition using both ionic (NaCl) and non-ionic cosolutes (ethylene glycol, glycine betaine, maltose, nicotinamide, urea). While the non-ionic cosolutes all destabilized the ligand/DNA complex, their quantitative effects were heterogeneous in a cosolute- and salt-dependent manner. Perturbation with NaCl in the absence of non-ionic cosolute showed that preferential hydration water was released upon formation of the DB1976/DNA complex. As salt probes counter-ion release from charged groups such as the DNA backbone, we propose that the preferential hydration uptake in DB1976/DNA binding observed in the presence of osmolytes reflects the exchange of preferentially bound cosolute with hydration water in the environs of the bound DNA, rather than a net uptake of hydration waters by the complex.