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Featured researches published by Laurent Calcul.


Future Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Natural products as a rich source of tau-targeting drugs for Alzheimer’s disease

Laurent Calcul; Bo Zhang; Umesh K. Jinwal; Chad A. Dickey; Bill J. Baker

Alzheimers disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder and the most common form of dementia, affecting more than 5.4 million people in the USA. Although the cause of AD is not well understood, the cholinergic, amyloid and tau hypotheses were proposed to explain its development. Drug discovery for AD based on the cholinergic and amyloid theories have not been effective. In this article we summarize tau-based natural products as AD therapeutics from a variety of biological sources, including the anti-amyloid agent curcumin, isolated from turmeric, the microtubule stabilizer paclitaxel, from the Pacific Yew Taxus brevifolia, and the Streptomyces-derived Hsp90 inhibitor, geldanamycin. The overlooked approach of clearing tau aggregation will most likely be the next objective for AD drug discovery.


Marine Drugs | 2013

Screening Mangrove Endophytic Fungi for Antimalarial Natural Products

Laurent Calcul; Carrie Waterman; Wai Sheung Ma; Matthew D. Lebar; Charles Harter; Tina Mutka; Lindsay Morton; Patrick Maignan; Alberto van Olphen; Dennis E. Kyle; Lilian L.P. Vrijmoed; Ka-Lai Pang; Cedric Pearce; Bill J. Baker

We conducted a screening campaign to investigate fungi as a source for new antimalarial compounds. A subset of our fungal collection comprising Chinese mangrove endophytes provided over 5000 lipophilic extracts. We developed an accelerated discovery program based on small-scale cultivation for crude extract screening and a high-throughput malaria assay. Criteria for hits were developed and high priority hits were subjected to scale-up cultivation. Extracts from large scale cultivation were fractionated and these fractions subjected to both in vitro malaria and cytotoxicity screening. Criteria for advancing fractions to purification were developed, including the introduction of a selectivity index and by dereplication of known metabolites. From the Chinese mangrove endophytes, four new compounds (14–16, 18) were isolated including a new dimeric tetrahydroxanthone, dicerandrol D (14), which was found to display the most favorable bioactivity profile.


Journal of Natural Products | 2016

ent-Labdane Diterpenoids from the Aerial Parts of Eupatorium obtusissmum

Quírico A. Castillo; Jorge Triana; José Luis Eiroa; Laurent Calcul; Edwin Rivera; Lukasz Wojtas; José M. Padrón; Lise Boberieth; Mehdi Keramane; Ernesto V Abel-Santos; Luis A. Báez; Evelyn A. Germosén

Six new ent-labdane diterpenoids, uasdlabdanes A-F (1-6), were isolated from the aerial parts of Eupatorium obtusissmum. The new structures were elucidated through spectroscopic and spectrometric data analyses. The absolute configurations of compounds 1 and 2 were established by X-ray crystallography, and those of 3-6, by comparison of experimental and calculated electronic circular dichroism spectra. The antiproliferative activity of the compounds was studied in a panel of six representative human solid tumor cell lines and showed GI50 values ranging from 19 to >100 μM.


Medicinal Research Reviews | 2016

Miniaturized Cultivation of Microbiota for Antimalarial Drug Discovery.

Carrie Waterman; Laurent Calcul; Jeremy Beau; Wai Sheung Ma; Matthew D. Lebar; Jacqueline L. von Salm; Charles Harter; Tina Mutka; Lindsay Morton; Patrick Maignan; Betty Barisic; Alberto van Olphen; Dennis E. Kyle; Lilian L.P. Vrijmoed; Ka-Lai Pang; Cedric J. Pearce; Bill J. Baker

The ongoing search for effective antiplasmodial agents remains essential in the fight against malaria worldwide. Emerging parasitic drug resistance places an urgent need to explore chemotherapies with novel structures and mechanisms of action. Natural products have historically provided effective antimalarial drug scaffolds. In an effort to search natures chemical potential for antiplasmodial agents, unconventionally sourced organisms coupled with innovative cultivation techniques were utilized. Approximately 60,000 niche microbes from various habitats (slow‐growing terrestrial fungi, Antarctic microbes, and mangrove endophytes) were cultivated on a small‐scale, extracted, and used in high‐throughput screening to determine antimalarial activity. About 1% of crude extracts were considered active and 6% partially active (≥67% inhibition at 5 and 50 μg/mL, respectively). Active extracts (685) were cultivated on a large‐scale, fractionated, and screened for both antimalarial activity and cytotoxicity. High interest fractions (397) with an IC50 < 1.11 μg/mL were identified and subjected to chromatographic separation for compound characterization and dereplication. Identifying active compounds with nanomolar antimalarial activity coupled with a selectivity index tenfold higher was accomplished with two of the 52 compounds isolated. This microscale, high‐throughput screening project for antiplasmodial agents is discussed in the context of current natural product drug discovery efforts.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2015

Synthesis, Stereochemical Analysis, and Derivatization of Myricanol Provide New Probes That Promote Autophagic Tau Clearance

Mackenzie D. Martin; Laurent Calcul; Courtney A. Smith; Umesh K. Jinwal; Sarah N. Fontaine; April L. Darling; Kent W. Seeley; Lukasz Wojtas; Malathi Narayan; Jason E. Gestwicki; Garry R. Smith; Allen B. Reitz; Bill J. Baker; Chad A. Dickey

We previously discovered that one specific scalemic preparation of myricanol (1), a constituent of Myrica cerifera (bayberry/southern wax myrtle) root bark, could lower the levels of the microtubule-associated protein tau (MAPT). The significance is that tau accumulates in a number of neurodegenerative diseases, the most common being Alzheimers disease (AD). Herein, a new synthetic route to prepare myricanol using a suitable boronic acid pinacol ester intermediate is reported. An X-ray crystal structure of the isolated myricanol (1) was obtained and showed a co-crystal consisting of (+)-aR,11S-myricanol (2) and (-)-aS,11R-myricanol (3) coformers. Surprisingly, 3, obtained from chiral separation from 1, reduced tau levels in both cultured cells and ex vivo brain slices from a mouse model of tauopathy at reasonable mid-to-low micromolar potency, whereas 2 did not. SILAC proteomics and cell assays revealed that 3 promoted tau degradation through an autophagic mechanism, which was in contrast to that of other tau-lowering compounds previously identified by our group. During the course of structure-activity relationship (SAR) development, we prepared compound 13 by acid-catalyzed dehydration of 1. 13 had undergone an unexpected structural rearrangement through the isomyricanol substitution pattern (e.g., 16), as verified by X-ray structural analysis. Compound 13 displayed robust tau-lowering activity, and, importantly, its enantiomers reduced tau levels similarly. Therefore, the semisynthetic analogue 13 provides a foundation for further development as a tau-lowering agent without its SAR being based on chirality.


Tetrahedron Letters | 2014

A potent antimalarial trichothecene from hyphomycete species

Carrie Waterman; Laurent Calcul; Tina Mutka; Dennis E. Kyle; Cedric J. Pearce; Bill J. Baker


Molecular 2014, Vol. 1, Pages 81-98 | 2014

Virtual target screening to rapidly identify potential protein targets of natural products in drug discovery

Yuri Pevzner; Daniel N. Santiago; Jacqueline L. von Salm; Rainer Metcalf; Kenyon G. Daniel; Laurent Calcul; H. Lee Woodcock; Bill J. Baker; Wayne C. Guida; Wesley H. Brooks


Archive | 2015

Screening Marine Microbial Libraries

Jacqueline von Salm; Christopher Witowski; Danielle Demers; Ryan Young; Laurent Calcul; Bill J. Baker


Archive | 2015

Compounds and related methods for treatment of neurodegenerative diseases

Umesh K. Jinwal; Bill J. Baker; Laurent Calcul


Planta Medica | 2015

Targeting bioactive chemical space with a small natural products library: Expanding diversity and predictability

Jl von Salm; Daniel N. Santiago; Nerida G. Wilson; Laurent Calcul; Dennis E. Kyle; Wayne C. Guida; Bill J. Baker

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Bill J. Baker

University of South Florida

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Dennis E. Kyle

University of South Florida

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Umesh K. Jinwal

University of South Florida

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Carrie Waterman

University of the Sciences

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Chad A. Dickey

University of South Florida

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Matthew D. Lebar

University of South Florida

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Tina Mutka

University of South Florida

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Alberto van Olphen

University of South Florida

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Charles Harter

University of South Florida

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