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Dive into the research topics where Larry W. Hardy is active.

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Featured researches published by Larry W. Hardy.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1991

Systematic mutation of bacteriophage T4 lysozyme

Dale Rennell; Suzanne E. Bouvier; Larry W. Hardy; Anthony R. Poteete

Amber mutations were introduced into every codon (except the initiating AUG) of the bacteriophage T4 lysozyme gene. The amber alleles were introduced into a bacteriophage P22 hybrid, called P22 e416, in which the normal P22 lysozyme gene is replaced by its T4 homologue, and which consequently depends upon T4 lysozyme for its ability to form a plaque. The resulting amber mutants were tested for plaque formation on amber suppressor strains of Salmonella typhimurium. Experiments with other hybrid phages engineered to produce different amounts of wild-type T4 lysozyme have shown that, to score as deleterious, a mutation must reduce lysozyme activity to less than 3% of that produced by wild-type P22 e416. Plating the collection of amber mutants covering 163 of the 164 codons of T4 lysozyme, on 13 suppressor strains that each insert a different amino acid substitutions at every position in the protein (except the first). Of the resulting 2015 single amino acid substitutions in T4 lysozyme, 328 were found to be sufficiently deleterious to inhibit plaque formation. More than half (55%) of the positions in the protein tolerated all substitutions examined. Among (N-terminal) amber fragments, only those of 161 or more residues are active. The effects of many of the deleterious substitutions are interpretable in light of the known structure of T4 lysozyme. Residues in the molecule that are refractory to replacements generally have solvent-inaccessible side-chains; the catalytic Glu11 and Asp20 residues are notable exceptions. Especially sensitive sites include residues involved in buried salt bridges near the catalytic site (Asp10, Arg145 and Arg148) and a few others that may have critical structural roles (Gly30, Trp138 and Tyr161).


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2001

Pteridine reductase mechanism correlates pterin metabolism with drug resistance in trypanosomatid parasites

David G. Gourley; Alexander W. Schüttelkopf; Gordon A. Leonard; James Luba; Larry W. Hardy; Stephen M. Beverley; William N. Hunter

Pteridine reductase (PTR1) is a short-chain reductase (SDR) responsible for the salvage of pterins in parasitic trypanosomatids. PTR1 catalyzes the NADPH-dependent two-step reduction of oxidized pterins to the active tetrahydro-forms and reduces susceptibility to antifolates by alleviating dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) inhibition. Crystal structures of PTR1 complexed with cofactor and 7,8-dihydrobiopterin (DHB) or methotrexate (MTX) delineate the enzyme mechanism, broad spectrum of activity and inhibition by substrate or an antifolate. PTR1 applies two distinct reductive mechanisms to substrates bound in one orientation. The first reduction uses the generic SDR mechanism, whereas the second shares similarities with the mechanism proposed for DHFR. Both DHB and MTX form extensive hydrogen bonding networks with NADP(H) but differ in the orientation of the pteridine.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Design, Synthesis, and Structure−Activity Relationships of Novel Bicyclic Azole-amines as Negative Allosteric Modulators of Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor 5

Douglas F. Burdi; Rachel Hunt; Lei Fan; Tao Hu; Jun Wang; Zihong Guo; Zhiqiang Huang; Chengde Wu; Larry W. Hardy; Michel Detheux; Michael Anthony Orsini; Maria S. Quinton; Robert A. Lew; Kerry L. Spear

A novel series of diaryl bicyclic azole-amines that are potent selective negative modulators of metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5) were identified through rational design. An initial hit compound 5a of modest potency (IC(50) = 1.2 μM) was synthesized. Evaluation of structure-activity relationships (SAR) on the left-hand side of the molecule revealed a preference for a 2-substituted pyridine group linked directly to the central heterocycle. Variation of the central azolo-amine portion of the molecule revealed a preference for the [4,5-c]-oxazoloazepine scaffold, while right-hand side variants showed a preference for ortho- and meta-substituted benzene rings linked directly to the tertiary amine of the saturated heterocycle. These iterations led to the synthesis of 29b, a potent (IC(50) = 16 nM) and selective negative modulator that showed good brain penetrance, high receptor occupancy, and a duration of action greater than 1 h in rat when administered intraperitoneally. Formal PK studies in rat and Rhesus monkey revealed a short half-life that was attributable to high first-pass clearance.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Synthesis and pharmacological characterization of bicyclic triple reuptake inhibitor 3-aryl octahydrocyclopenta[c]pyrrole analogues.

Shao L; Hewitt Mc; Malcolm Sc; Wang F; Ma J; Una C. Campbell; Spicer Na; Engel; Larry W. Hardy; Jiang Zd; Schreiber R; Spear Kl; Mark A. Varney

The present work expands the chemical space known to offer potent inhibition of the serotonin transporter (SERT), norepinephrine transporter (NET), and dopamine transporter (DAT) and discloses novel bicyclic octahydrocyclopenta[c]pyrrole and octahydro-1H-isoindole scaffolds as potent triple reuptake inhibitors (TRIs) for the potential treatment of depression. Optimized compounds 22a (SERT, NET, DAT, IC(50) = 20, 109, 430 nM), 23a (SERT, NET, DAT, IC(50) = 29, 85, 168 nM), and 26a (SERT, NET, DAT, IC(50) = 53, 150, 140 nM) were highly brain penetrant, active in vivo in the mouse tail suspension test at 10 and 30 mpk PO, and were not generally motor stimulants at doses ranging from 1 to 30 mpk PO. Moderate in vitro cytochrome P450 (CYP) and potassium ion channel Kv11.1 (hERG) inhibition were uncovered as potential liabilities for the chemical series.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Discovery of N-methyl-1-(1-phenylcyclohexyl)methanamine, a novel triple serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine reuptake inhibitor

Liming Shao; Michael Charles Hewitt; Fengjiang Wang; Scott Christopher Malcolm; Jianguo Ma; John Emmerson Campbell; Una Campbell; Sharon Rae Engel; Nancy A. Spicer; Larry W. Hardy; Rudy Schreiber; Kerry L. Spear; Mark A. Varney

The current work discloses a novel cyclohexylarylamine chemotype with potent inhibition of the serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine transporters and potential for treatment of major depressive disorder. Optimized compounds 1 (SERT, NET, DAT, IC(50)=169, 85, 21 nM) and 42 (SERT, NET, DAT IC(50)=34, 295, 90 nM) were highly brain penetrant, active in vivo in the mouse tail suspension test at 30 mpk po and were not general motor stimulants.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Synthesis and pharmacological evaluation of 4-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-N-methyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydronaphthalenyl amines as triple reuptake inhibitors.

Liming Shao; Fengjiang Wang; Scott Christopher Malcolm; Jianguo Ma; Michael Charles Hewitt; Una Campbell; Larry R. Bush; Nancy A. Spicer; Sharon Rae Engel; Lakshmi D. Saraswat; Larry W. Hardy; Patrick Koch; Rudy Schreiber; Kerry L. Spear; Mark A. Varney

The present work describes a series of novel chiral amines that potently inhibit the in vitro reuptake of serotonin, norepinephrine and dopamine (triple reuptake inhibitors) and were active in vivo in a mouse model predictive of antidepressant like activity. The detailed synthesis and in vitro activity and ADME profile of compounds is described, which represent a previously undisclosed triple reuptake inhibitor chemotype.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 1999

Crystallization of recombinant Leishmania major pteridine reductase 1 (PTR1).

David G. Gourley; James Luba; Larry W. Hardy; Stephen M. Beverley; William N. Hunter

The enzyme pteridine reductase (PTR1) has recently been discovered in the protozoan parasite Leishmania and validated as a target for therapeutic intervention. PTR1 is responsible for the salvage of pteridines and also contributes to antifolate drug resistance. Structural analysis, in combination with ongoing biochemical characterization will assist the elucidation of the structure-activity relationships of this important enzyme and support a structure-based approach to discover novel inhibitors. Recombinant L. major PTR1 has been purified from an Escherichia coli expression system and used in crystallization experiments. Orthorhombic crystals have been obtained and data to 2.8 A has been measured. The space group is P2(1)2(1)2 or P2(1)2(1)2(1) with unit-cell dimensions of a = 103.9, b = 134.7, c = 96.2 A. One homotetramer, of molecular mass approximately 120 kDa, probably constitutes the asymmetric unit and gives a Matthews coefficient, V(m), of 2.8 A(3) Da(-1) and 56% solvent volume. Self-rotation function calculations show a single well defined non-crystallographic twofold axis with features that might represent additional elements of non-crystallographic symmetry. The detail of exactly what constitutes the asymmetric unit will be resolved by structure determination.


Biotechnology Progress | 2008

Affinity ligand selection from a library of small molecules: Assay development, screening, and application

Lakshmi D. Saraswat; Huiyun Zhang; Larry W. Hardy; Simon S. Jones; Rama Bhikhabhai; Charlotte Brink; Annika Bergenstråhle; Rolf Haglund; Steven L. Gallion

A facile and cost‐effective process for screening synthetic libraries for an affinity ligand is described. A high throughput 96‐well plate filtration method was designed to screen both discrete compounds and mixtures of compounds attached to a solid support. Human serum albumin (HSA) was used as a target protein to demonstrate the proof of concept. Detection and quantitation by fluorescence was accomplished with the use of fluorescamine to conjugate the protein in the filtrate. It is found that mixtures demonstrating low average binding reflect an overall lower hit rate of the components, whereas deconvolution of mixtures with high protein binding consistently provides a high hit rate. This differs from many of the previous experiences screening solid‐phase mixtures in which high false positive rates are noted to occur. A total of 100K compounds were tested: 25K as discrete samples and 75K as mixtures. An overall hit rate of 8% was observed. Secondary screening of compounds measured specificity, recovery, and dynamic binding capacity. The effectiveness of the method is illustrated using an affinity column made with a representative lead compound. A similar purity was achieved in a single‐step purification of HSA from serum as compared to that obtained by two steps of ion‐exchange chromatography. The process for primary screening of a large number of compounds is simple, inexpensive, and applicable to any soluble target protein of known or unknown function from crude mixtures and may have additional utility as a generic chemical affinity tool for the functional characterization of novel proteins emerging from proteomics work.


Vaccine | 1992

Biophysical mechanism of the scavenger site near T cell-presented epitopes

Shan Lu; Victor E. Reyes; Christopher M. Bositis; Thomas G. Goldschmidt; Valery Lam; Rochelle R. Torgerson; Thomas L. Ciardelli; Larry W. Hardy; Robert A. Lew; Robert E. Humphreys

We seek to identify consensus sequences in digested fragments of antigenic proteins regulating selection and major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted presentation to T cells of epitopes within those fragments. One such pattern, of recurrent, hydrophobic sidechains forming a longitudinal hydrophobic strip when a sequence is coiled as an alpha-helix, is found in or near most T cell-presented epitopes. Such recurrent hydrophobicity may lead to protease-protected coiling of the fragment against endosomal membranes and transfer to MHC molecules. This concept leads to better identification of T cell-presented sequences and possible to engineering of T cell-presented vaccines to affect their potency and MHC restriction.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Discovery of 1-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-N,N-dimethyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroquinolin-4-amine, a dual serotonin and dopamine reuptake inhibitor.

Liming Shao; Jianguo Ma; Fengjiang Wang; Scott Christopher Malcolm; Michael Charles Hewitt; Una Campbell; Nancy A. Spicer; Larry W. Hardy; Rudy Schreiber; Kerry L. Spear; Mark A. Varney

The present work describes a series of novel tetrahydroquinoline amines that potently inhibit the in vitro reuptake of serotonin and dopamine (dual reuptake inhibitors). The compounds are structurally related to a series we disclosed previously, but are improved with respect to cytochrome P-450 enzyme (CYP) and potassium ion channel Kv11.1 (hERG) inhibition and synthetic accessibility. The detailed synthesis and in vitro activity and ADME profile of the compounds is described, which represent a previously undisclosed dual reuptake inhibitor chemotype.

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Mark A. Varney

United States Military Academy

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Stephen M. Beverley

Washington University in St. Louis

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