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Dive into the research topics where Kimberly F. Fennell is active.

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Featured researches published by Kimberly F. Fennell.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Mechanism for the allosteric regulation of phosphodiesterase 2A deduced from the X-ray structure of a near full-length construct

Jayvardhan Pandit; Michael D. Forman; Kimberly F. Fennell; Keith S. Dillman; Frank S. Menniti

We report the X-ray crystal structure of a phosphodiesterase (PDE) that includes both catalytic and regulatory domains. PDE2A (215–900) crystallized as a dimer in which each subunit had an extended organization of regulatory GAF-A and GAF-B and catalytic domains connected by long α-helices. The subunits cross at the GAF-B/catalytic domain linker, and each side of the dimer contains in series the GAF-A and GAF-B of one subunit and the catalytic domain of the other subunit. A dimer interface extends over the entire length of the molecule. The substrate binding pocket of each catalytic domain is occluded by the H-loop. We deduced from comparisons with structures of isolated, ligand-bound catalytic subunits that the H-loop swings out to allow substrate access. However, in dimeric PDE2A (215–900), the H-loops of the two catalytic subunits pack against each other at the dimer interface, necessitating movement of the catalytic subunits to allow for H-loop movement. Comparison of the unliganded GAF-B of PDE2A (215–900) with previous structures of isolated, cGMP-bound GAF domains indicates that cGMP binding induces a significant shift in the GAF-B/catalytic domain linker. We propose that cGMP binding to GAF-B causes movement, through this linker region, of the catalytic domains, such that the H-loops no longer pack at the dimer interface and are, instead, free to swing out to allow substrate access. This increase in substrate access is proposed as the basis for PDE2A activation by cGMP and may be a general mechanism for regulation of all PDEs.


Molecular Cell | 2000

Activation of human liver glycogen phosphorylase by alteration of the secondary structure and packing of the catalytic core.

Virginia L. Rath; Mark Ammirati; Peter K. LeMotte; Kimberly F. Fennell; Mahmoud N. Mansour; Dennis E. Danley; Thomas R. Hynes; Gayle K. Schulte; David John Wasilko; Jayvardhan Pandit

Glycogen phosphorylases catalyze the breakdown of glycogen to glucose-1-phosphate, which enters glycolysis to fulfill the energetic requirements of the organism. Maintaining control of blood glucose levels is critical in minimizing the debilitating effects of diabetes, making liver glycogen phosphorylase a potential therapeutic target. To support inhibitor design, we determined the crystal structures of the active and inactive forms of human liver glycogen phosphorylase a. During activation, forty residues of the catalytic site undergo order/disorder transitions, changes in secondary structure, or packing to reorganize the catalytic site for substrate binding and catalysis. Knowing the inactive and active conformations of the liver enzyme and how each differs from its counterpart in muscle phosphorylase provides the basis for designing inhibitors that bind preferentially to the inactive conformation of the liver isozyme.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Use of structure-based design to discover a potent, selective, in vivo active phosphodiesterase 10A inhibitor lead series for the treatment of schizophrenia.

Christopher John Helal; Zhijun Kang; Xinjun Hou; Jayvardhan Pandit; Thomas A. Chappie; John M. Humphrey; Eric S. Marr; Kimberly F. Fennell; Lois K. Chenard; Carol B. Fox; Christopher J. Schmidt; Robert Williams; Douglas S. Chapin; Judith A. Siuciak; Lorraine A. Lebel; Frank S. Menniti; Julia Cianfrogna; Kari R. Fonseca; Frederick R. Nelson; Rebecca O'connor; Mary Macdougall; Laura McDowell; Spiros Liras

Utilizing structure-based virtual library design and scoring, a novel chimeric series of phosphodiesterase 10A (PDE10A) inhibitors was discovered by synergizing binding site interactions and ADME properties of two chemotypes. Virtual libraries were docked and scored for potential binding ability, followed by visual inspection to prioritize analogs for parallel and directed synthesis. The process yielded highly potent and selective compounds such as 16. New X-ray cocrystal structures enabled rational design of substituents that resulted in the successful optimization of physical properties to produce in vivo activity and to modulate microsomal clearance and permeability.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2009

New Kinase Regulation Mechanism Found in HipBA: a Bacterial Persistence Switch

Artem G. Evdokimov; Igor Voznesensky; Kimberly F. Fennell; Marie Anderson; James F. Smith; Douglas A. Fisher

Bacterial persistence is the ability of individual cells to randomly enter a period of dormancy during which the cells are protected against antibiotics. In Escherichia coli, persistence is regulated by the activity of a protein kinase HipA and its DNA-binding partner HipB, which is a strong inhibitor of both HipA activity and hip operon transcription. The crystal structure of the HipBA complex was solved by application of the SAD technique to a mercury derivative. In this article, the fortuitous and interesting effect of mercury soaks on the native HipBA crystals is discussed as well as the intriguing tryptophan-binding pocket found on the HipA surface. A HipA-regulation model is also proposed that is consistent with the available structural and biochemical data.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2016

Discovery of a Selective Covalent Inhibitor of Lysophospholipase-like 1 (LYPLAL1) as a Tool to Evaluate the Role of this Serine Hydrolase in Metabolism.

Kay Ahn; Markus Boehm; Matthew Frank Brown; Jessica Calloway; Ye Che; Jinshan Chen; Kimberly F. Fennell; Kieran F. Geoghegan; Adam M. Gilbert; Jemy A. Gutierrez; Amit S. Kalgutkar; Adhiraj Lanba; Chris Limberakis; Thomas V. Magee; Inish O’Doherty; Robert M. Oliver; Brandon Pabst; Jayvardhan Pandit; Kevin D. Parris; Jeffrey A. Pfefferkorn; Timothy P. Rolph; Rushi Patel; Brandon P. Schuff; Veerabahu Shanmugasundaram; Jeremy T. Starr; Alison H. Varghese; Nicholas B. Vera; Cecile Vernochet; Jiangli Yan

Lysophospholipase-like 1 (LYPLAL1) is an uncharacterized metabolic serine hydrolase. Human genome-wide association studies link variants of the gene encoding this enzyme to fat distribution, waist-to-hip ratio, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. We describe the discovery of potent and selective covalent small-molecule inhibitors of LYPLAL1 and their use to investigate its role in hepatic metabolism. In hepatocytes, selective inhibition of LYPLAL1 increased glucose production supporting the inference that LYPLAL1 is a significant actor in hepatic metabolism. The results provide an example of how a selective chemical tool can contribute to evaluating a hypothetical target for therapeutic intervention, even in the absence of complete biochemical characterization.


Protein Science | 2015

Discovery and structural characterization of an allosteric inhibitor of bacterial cis‐prenyltransferase

Dennis E. Danley; Eric Todd Baima; Mahmoud N. Mansour; Kimberly F. Fennell; Boris A. Chrunyk; John P. Mueller; Shenping Liu; Xiayang Qiu

Undecaprenyl pyrophosphate synthase (UPPs) is an essential enzyme in a key bacterial cell wall synthesis pathway. It catalyzes the consecutive condensations of isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP) groups on to a trans‐farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP) to produce a C55 isoprenoid, undecaprenyl pyrophosphate (UPP). Here we report the discovery and co‐crystal structures of a drug‐like UPPs inhibitor in complex with Streptococcus pneumoniae UPPs, with and without substrate FPP, at resolutions of 2.2 and 2.1 Å, respectively. The UPPs inhibitor has a low molecular weight (355 Da), but displays potent inhibition of UPP synthesis in vitro (IC50 50 nM) that translates into excellent whole cell antimicrobial activity against pathogenic strains of Streptococcal species (MIC90 0.4 µg mL−1). Interestingly, the inhibitor does not compete with the substrates but rather binds at a site adjacent to the FPP binding site and interacts with the tail of the substrate. Based on the structures, an allosteric inhibition mechanism of UPPs is proposed for this inhibitor. This inhibition mechanism is supported by biochemical and biophysical experiments, and provides a basis for the development of novel antibiotics targeting Streptococcus pneumoniae.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Application of Structure-Based Design and Parallel Chemistry to Identify a Potent, Selective, and Brain Penetrant Phosphodiesterase 2A Inhibitor.

Christopher John Helal; Eric P. Arnold; Tracey Boyden; Cheng Chang; Thomas A. Chappie; Kimberly F. Fennell; Michael D. Forman; Mihály Hajós; John F. Harms; William E. Hoffman; John M. Humphrey; Zhijun Kang; Robin J. Kleiman; Bethany L. Kormos; Che-Wah Lee; Jiemin Lu; Noha Maklad; Laura McDowell; Scot Mente; Rebecca E. O’Connor; Jayvardhan Pandit; Mary Piotrowski; Anne W. Schmidt; Christopher J. Schmidt; Hirokazu Ueno; Patrick Robert Verhoest; Edward X. Yang

Phosphodiesterase 2A (PDE2A) inhibitors have been reported to demonstrate in vivo activity in preclinical models of cognition. To more fully explore the biology of PDE2A inhibition, we sought to identify potent PDE2A inhibitors with improved brain penetration as compared to current literature compounds. Applying estimated human dose calculations while simultaneously leveraging synthetically enabled chemistry and structure-based drug design has resulted in a highly potent, selective, brain penetrant compound 71 (PF-05085727) that effects in vivo biochemical changes commensurate with PDE2A inhibition along with behavioral and electrophysiological reversal of the effects of NMDA antagonists in rodents. This data supports the ability of PDE2A inhibitors to potentiate NMDA signaling and their further development for clinical cognition indications.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2000

A crystallizable form of RIIβ regulatory domain obtained by limited proteolysis

Dennis E. Danley; M.E. Haggan; D. Cunningham; Kimberly F. Fennell; T.A. Pauly; P.K. LeMotte


Archive | 2004

CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF STREPTOCOCCUS UNDECAPRENYL PYROPHOSPHATE SYNTHASE AND USES THEREOF

Kimberly F. Fennell; Mahmoud N. Mansour; Xiayang Qiu


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018

Discovery of 3-Cyano-N-(3-(1-isobutyrylpiperidin-4-yl)-1-methyl-4-(trifluoromethyl)-1H-pyrrolo[2,3-b]pyridin-5-yl)benzamide. A Potent, Selective, and Orally Bioavailable Retinoic Acid Receptor-Related Orphan Receptor C2 (RORC2) Inverse Agonist.

Mark E. Schnute; Mattias Wennerstål; Jennifer Alley; Martin Bengtsson; James Robert Blinn; Charles W. Bolten; Timothy Braden; Tomas Bonn; Bo Carlsson; Nicole Caspers; Ming Z. Chen; Chulho Choi; Leon P. Collis; Kimberly Crouse; Mathias Färnegårdh; Kimberly F. Fennell; Susan Fish; Andrew C. Flick; Annika Goos-Nilsson; Hjalmar Gullberg; Peter K. Harris; Steven E. Heasley; Martin Hegen; Alexander E. Hromockyj; Xiao Hu; Bolette Husman; Tomasz Janosik; Peter G. Jones; Neelu Kaila; Elisabet Kallin

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