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Dive into the research topics where Linda Bartholomew is active.

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Featured researches published by Linda Bartholomew.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2004

A 7-Deaza-Adenosine Analog Is a Potent and Selective Inhibitor of Hepatitis C Virus Replication with Excellent Pharmacokinetic Properties

David B. Olsen; Anne B. Eldrup; Linda Bartholomew; Balkrishen Bhat; Michele Bosserman; Alessandra Ceccacci; Lawrence F. Colwell; John F. Fay; Osvaldo A. Flores; Krista Getty; Jay A. Grobler; Robert L. Lafemina; Eric J. Markel; Giovanni Migliaccio; Marija Prhavc; Mark Stahlhut; Joanne E. Tomassini; Malcolm Maccoss; Daria J. Hazuda; Steven S. Carroll

ABSTRACT Improved treatments for chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection are needed due to the suboptimal response rates and deleterious side effects associated with current treatment options. The triphosphates of 2′-C-methyl-adenosine and 2′-C-methyl-guanosine were previously shown to be potent inhibitors of the HCV RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) that is responsible for the replication of viral RNA in cells. Here we demonstrate that the inclusion of a 7-deaza modification in a series of purine nucleoside triphosphates results in an increase in inhibitory potency against the HCV RdRp and improved pharmacokinetic properties. Notably, incorporation of the 7-deaza modification into 2′-C-methyl-adenosine results in an inhibitor with a 20-fold-increased potency as the 5′-triphosphate in HCV RdRp assays while maintaining the inhibitory potency of the nucleoside in the bicistronic HCV replicon and with reduced cellular toxicity. In contrast, while 7-deaza-2′-C-methyl-GTP also displays enhanced inhibitory potency in enzyme assays, due to poor cellular penetration and/or metabolism, the nucleoside does not inhibit replication of a bicistronic HCV replicon in cell culture. 7-Deaza-2′-C-methyl-adenosine displays promising in vivo pharmacokinetics in three animal species, as well as an acute oral lethal dose in excess of 2,000 mg/kg of body weight in mice. Taken together, these data demonstrate that 7-deaza-2′-C-methyl-adenosine is an attractive candidate for further investigation as a potential treatment for HCV infection.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Mechanism of Action and Antiviral Activity of Benzimidazole-Based Allosteric Inhibitors of the Hepatitis C Virus RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase

Licia Tomei; Sergio Altamura; Linda Bartholomew; Antonino Biroccio; Alessandra Ceccacci; Laura Pacini; Frank Narjes; Nadia Gennari; Monica Bisbocci; Ilario Incitti; Laura Orsatti; Steven Harper; Ian Stansfield; Michael Rowley; Raffaele De Francesco; Giovanni Migliaccio

ABSTRACT The RNA-dependent RNA polymerase of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is the catalytic subunit of the viral RNA amplification machinery and is an appealing target for the development of new therapeutic agents against HCV infection. Nonnucleoside inhibitors based on a benzimidazole scaffold have been recently reported. Compounds of this class are efficient inhibitors of HCV RNA replication in cell culture, thus providing attractive candidates for further development. Here we report the detailed analysis of the mechanism of action of selected benzimidazole inhibitors. Kinetic data and binding experiments indicated that these compounds act as allosteric inhibitors that block the activity of the polymerase prior to the elongation step. Escape mutations that confer resistance to these compounds map to proline 495, a residue located on the surface of the polymerase thumb domain and away from the active site. Substitution of this residue is sufficient to make the HCV enzyme and replicons resistant to the inhibitors. Interestingly, proline 495 lies in a recently identified noncatalytic GTP-binding site, thus validating it as a potential allosteric site that can be targeted by small-molecule inhibitors of HCV polymerase.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Reduction of Hepatitis C Virus NS5A Hyperphosphorylation by Selective Inhibition of Cellular Kinases Activates Viral RNA Replication in Cell Culture

Petra Neddermann; Manuela Quintavalle; Chiara Di Pietro; Angelica Clementi; Mauro Cerretani; Sergio Altamura; Linda Bartholomew; Raffaele De Francesco

ABSTRACT Efficient replication of hepatitis C virus (HCV) subgenomic RNA in cell culture requires the introduction of adaptive mutations. In this report we describe a system which enables efficient replication of the Con1 subgenomic replicon in Huh7 cells without the introduction of adaptive mutations. The starting hypothesis was that high amounts of the NS5A hyperphosphorylated form, p58, inhibit replication and that reduction of p58 by inhibition of specific kinase(s) below a certain threshold enables HCV replication. Upon screening of a panel of kinase inhibitors, we selected three compounds which inhibited NS5A phosphorylation in vitro and the formation of NS5A p58 in cell culture. Cells, transfected with the HCV Con1 wild-type sequence, support HCV RNA replication upon addition of any of the three compounds. The effect of the kinase inhibitors was found to be synergistic with coadaptive mutations in NS3. This is the first direct demonstration that the presence of high amounts of NS5A-p58 causes inhibition of HCV RNA replication in cell culture and that this inhibition can be relieved by kinase inhibitors.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Characterization of the Inhibition of Hepatitis C Virus RNA Replication by Nonnucleosides

Licia Tomei; Sergio Altamura; Linda Bartholomew; Monica Bisbocci; Carolyn Bailey; Michele Bosserman; Antonella Cellucci; Eleonora Forte; Ilario Incitti; Laura Orsatti; Uwe Koch; Raffaele De Francesco; David B. Olsen; Steven S. Carroll; Giovanni Migliaccio

ABSTRACT The RNA-dependent RNA polymerase of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is necessary for the replication of viral RNA and thus represents an attractive target for drug development. Several structural classes of nonnucleoside inhibitors (NNIs) of HCV RNA polymerase have been described, including a promising series of benzothiadiazine compounds that efficiently block replication of HCV subgenomic replicons in tissue culture. In this work we report the selection of replicons resistant to inhibition by the benzothiadiazine class of NNIs. Four different single mutations were identified in separate clones, and all four map to the RNA polymerase gene, validating the polymerase as the antiviral target of inhibition. The mutations (M414T, C451R, G558R, and H95R) render the HCV replicons resistant to inhibition by benzothiadiazines, though the mutant replicons remain sensitive to inhibition by other nucleoside and NNIs of the HCV RNA polymerase. Additionally, cross-resistance studies and synergistic inhibition of the enzyme by combinations of a benzimidazole and a benzothiadiazine indicate the existence of nonoverlapping binding sites for these two structural classes of inhibitors.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Naturally Occurring Hepatitis C Virus Subgenomic Deletion Mutants Replicate Efficiently in Huh-7 Cells and Are trans-Packaged In Vitro To Generate Infectious Defective Particles

Laura Pacini; Rita Graziani; Linda Bartholomew; Raffaele De Francesco; Giacomo Paonessa

ABSTRACT Naturally occurring hepatitis C virus (HCV) subgenomic RNAs have been found in several HCV patients. These subgenomic deletion mutants, mostly lacking the genes encoding envelope glycoproteins, were found in both liver and serum, where their relatively high abundance suggests that they are capable of autonomous replication and can be packaged and secreted in viral particles, presumably harboring the envelope proteins from wild type virus coinfecting the same cell. We recapitulated some of these natural subgenomic deletions in the context of the isolate JFH-1 and confirmed these hypotheses in vitro. In Huh-7.5 cells, these deletion-containing genomes show robust replication and can be efficiently trans-packaged and infect naïve Huh-7.5 cells when cotransfected with the full-length wild-type J6/JFH genome. The genome structure of these natural subgenomic deletion mutants was dissected, and the maintenance of both core and NS2 regions was proven to be significant for efficient replication and trans-packaging. To further explore the requirements needed to achieve trans-complementation, we provided different combinations of structural proteins in trans. Optimal trans-complementation was obtained when fragments of the polyprotein encompassing core to p7 or E1 to NS2 were expressed. Finally, we generated a stable helper cell line, constitutively expressing the structural proteins from core to p7, which efficiently supports trans-complementation of a subgenomic deletion encompassing amino acids 284 to 732. This cell line can produce and be infected by defective particles, thus representing a powerful tool to investigate the life cycle and relevance of natural HCV subgenomic deletion mutants in vivo.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

Structural Basis for Resistance of the Genotype 2b Hepatitis C Virus NS5B Polymerase to Site A Non-Nucleoside Inhibitors

Edwin H. Rydberg; Antonella Cellucci; Linda Bartholomew; Marco Mattu; Gaetano Barbato; Steven W. Ludmerer; Donald J. Graham; Sergio Altamura; Giacomo Paonessa; Raffaele De Francesco; Giovanni Migliaccio; Andrea Carfi

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) exists in six major genotypes. Compared with the 1b enzyme, genotype 2b HCV polymerase exhibits a more than 100-fold reduction in sensitivity to the indole-N-acetamide class of non-nucleoside inhibitors. These compounds have been shown to bind in a pocket occupied by helix A of the mobile Lambda1 loop in the apoenzyme. The three-dimensional structure of the HCV polymerase from genotype 2b was determined to 1.9-A resolution and compared with the genotype 1b enzyme. This structural analysis suggests that genotypic variants result in a different shape of the inhibitor binding site. Mutants of the inhibitor binding pocket were generated in a 1b enzyme and evaluated for their binding affinity and sensitivity to inhibition by indole-N-acetamides. Most of the point mutants showed little variation in activity and IC(50), with the exception of 15- and 7-fold increases in IC(50) for Leu392Ile and Val494Ala mutants (1b-->2b), respectively. Furthermore, a 1b replicon with 20-fold resistance to this class of inhibitors was selected and shown to contain the Leu392Ile mutation. Chimeric enzymes, where the 2b fingertip Lambda1 loop, pocket or both replaced the corresponding regions of the 1b enzyme, were also generated. The fingertip chimera retained 1b-like inhibitor binding affinity, whereas the other two chimeric constructs and the 2b enzyme displayed between 50- and 100-fold reduction in binding affinity. Together, these data suggest that differences in the amino acid composition and shape of the indole-N-acetamide binding pocket are responsible for the resistance of the 2b polymerase to this class of inhibitors.


Journal of Virology | 2000

In Vivo Selection of Protease Cleavage Sites by Using Chimeric Sindbis Virus Libraries

Laura Pacini; Alessandra Vitelli; Gessica Filocamo; Linda Bartholomew; Mirko Brunetti; Anna Tramontano; Christian Steinkühler; Giovanni Migliaccio

ABSTRACT Identifying protease cleavage sites contributes to our understanding of their specificity and biochemical properties and can help in designing specific inhibitors. One route to this end is the generation and screening of random libraries of cleavage sites. Both synthetic and phage-displayed libraries have been extensively used in vitro. We describe a novel system based on recombinant Sindbis virus which can be used to identify cleavage sites in vivo, thus eliminating the need for a purified enzyme and overcoming the problem of choosing the correct in vitro conditions. As a model we used the serine protease of the hepatitis C virus (HCV). We engineered the gene coding for this enzyme and two specific cleavage sites in the Sindbis virus structural gene and constructed libraries of viral genomes with a random sequence at either of the cleavage sites. The system was designed so that only viral genomes coding for sequences cleaved by the protease would produce viable viruses. With this system we selected viruses containing sequences mirroring those of the natural HCV protease substrates which were cleaved with comparable efficiencies.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Characterization of Resistance to Non-obligate Chain-terminating Ribonucleoside Analogs That Inhibit Hepatitis C Virus Replication in Vitro

Giovanni Migliaccio; Joanne E. Tomassini; Steven S. Carroll; Licia Tomei; Sergio Altamura; Balkrishen Bhat; Linda Bartholomew; Michele Bosserman; Alessandra Ceccacci; Lawrence F. Colwell; Riccardo Cortese; Raffaele De Francesco; Anne B. Eldrup; Krista Getty; Xiaoli S. Hou; Robert L. Lafemina; Steven W. Ludmerer; Malcolm Maccoss; Daniel R. McMasters; Mark Stahlhut; David B. Olsen; Daria J. Hazuda; Osvaldo A. Flores


Virology | 2002

Hepatitis C virus nonstructural proteins are localized in a modified endoplasmic reticulum of cells expressing viral subgenomic replicons.

Giovanna Mottola; Giorgia Cardinali; Alessandra Ceccacci; Caterina Trozzi; Linda Bartholomew; Maria Rosaria Torrisi; Emanuela Pedrazzini; Stefano Bonatti; Giovanni Migliaccio


Journal of Virology | 2003

In Vitro Selection and Characterization of Hepatitis C Virus Serine Protease Variants Resistant to an Active-Site Peptide Inhibitor

Caterina Trozzi; Linda Bartholomew; Alessandra Ceccacci; Gabriella Biasiol; Laura Pacini; Sergio Altamura; Frank Narjes; Ester Muraglia; Giacomo Paonessa; Uwe Koch; Raffaele De Francesco; Christian Steinkühler; Giovanni Migliaccio

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Michele Bosserman

United States Military Academy

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Steven S. Carroll

United States Military Academy

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